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The Ambivalent Representation of the Orient in T. E. Lawrence’s Seven Pillars of Wisdom: A Triumph (1935)

Sonia LamraniSonia Lamrani is a PhD candidate in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies at the University of Birmingham. She is currently in her third year. Sonia has a Master’s in Anglophone literature and a Bachelor of English Literature and Foreign Languages from the Faculty of Sciences Boumerdès in Algeria. Her research interests centre around the discourse of East-Orientalism in the Algerian postcolonial novel. She investigates the way Orientalist and colonialist discourses influenced the self-representation of Algerian postcolonial authors. Sonia Lamrani est doctorante en études coloniales et postcoloniales à l’université de Birmingham. Elle est actuellement en troisième année. Sonia est titulaire d’un master en littérature anglophone et d’une licence en littérature anglaise et en langues étrangères de la faculté des sciences de Boumerdès en Algérie. Ses centres de recherches académiques portent sur le discours orientaliste dans le roman algérien postcolonial. Elle examine comment les discours orientaliste et colonialiste ont influencé la façon dont les auteurs algériens postcoloniaux se représentent
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The literary output that was produced during the rise of the British Empire often reflected the imperialist spirit that dominated the world at that time. Travel writing was one of the major fields which prospered in parallel with the spread of British global paramountcy. This literary genre contributed to strengthening and legitimising the imperialist and colonialist expansion and therefore represents one of the prominent samples for the postcolonial analytical framework. This paper will focus on one of these travel accounts, Seven Pillars of Wisdom: A Triumph (1935), written by Thomas Edward Lawrence also known as ‘Lawrence of Arabia’. Drawing upon postcolonial literary criticism, this paper will show the way Lawrence simultaneously reaffirms and rejects the imperialist and colonialist discourse in his portrayals. This paper will shed light on the ambivalence which prevails in Lawrence’s representations of the Orient. On the one hand, this research shows the way Lawrence showcases examples of imperialist thinking by reproducing stereotypical representations of the Orient through excessive aestheticisation or demeaning of Oriental people and landscapes. On the other hand, this paper highlights Lawrence’s departure from the conventional imperialist discourse with more nuanced portrayals. This paper contends that Lawrence’s Orientalist discourse is much more ambivalent and subtle than the conclusions elaborated by Edward Said in his critical theory of Orientalism.

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