Edward Said vs Michel Foucault: The Divergence of Perspectives on Knowledge , Truth and Power
Ankara Üniversitesi
SBF Dergisi,
Cilt 72, No. 2, 2017, s. 315 - 331
EDWARD SAID VS MICHEL FOUCAULT:
THE DIVERGENCE OF PERSPECTIVES ON KNOWLEDGE,
TRUTH AND POWER*
Dr. Fatih Varol
İstanbul Üniversitesi
İlahiyat Fakültesi
●●●
Abstract
Despite Edward Said’s acknowledgement of the strong impact of Michel Foucault’s works on his
major study of Orientalism, Said quickly distanced himself from a Foucauldian perspective in his later
writings. The aim of this article is to exhibit the divergence of Said from Foucault. I firstly show their
convergent trajectories in Orientalism and then examine their divergent positions and dispositions in Said’s
writings. In particular, while Said had a tendency to reject the existence of truth and knowledge outside
discourse and power dynamics in Orientalism, he moves toward an anti-Foucauldian perspective in order to
defend universal values such as justice, freedom and equality because of the pacifying impact of Foucauldian
understanding of power, knowledge and truth in the resistance against the oppressors in his later writings. He
manifests himself as a dedicated intellectual to the defense of universal values against power in opposition to
moral and epistemological relativism rejecting the existence of universal values, expressed strongly in the
writings of Foucault.
Keywords: Said, Foucault, Power, Truth, Knowledge
Edward Said vs Michel Foucault: Bilgi, Hakikat ve İktidar Üzerine
Farklı Perspektifler
Öz
Edward Said‘in temel çalışması olan Oryantalizm‘in yazımında Foucault‘cu bir perspektifin güçlü
bir etkisi olmasına rağmen Said‘in sonraki yazılarında Foucault‘nun güçlü bir etkisi görülmemektedir. Bu
makaledeki amacım Said‘in Foucault‘nun etkisinden ayrılıp tam zıddı bir istikamete yönelişini sergilemektir.
Bu nedenle öncelikle Oryantalizm‘de Foucault‘nun etkisini gösterip sonrasında Said‘in ayrıştığı noktaları ele
alacağım. Kısaca, Said Oryantalizm‘de Foucault‘nun yazılarında da çok belirgin olan hakikat, bilgi, söylem
ve iktidar arasında bağımlı bir ilişkinin olduğunu ve bu nedenle iktidardan bağımsız bir hakikat ve bilginin
olmadığını iddia ederken, sonraki yazılarında ise Foucault‘cu bir yaklaşımın iktidara karşı hakikat, adalet ve
eşitlik gibi evrensel değerleri savunmak için uygun olmadığını düşünerek kendini evrensel değerleri
savunmaya adamış bir entelektüel olarak göstermektedir.
Anahtar Sözcükler: Said, Foucault, İktidar, Hakikat, Bilgi
* Makale geliş tarihi: 31.01.2017
Makale kabul tarihi: 13.05.2017
316 Ankara Üniversitesi SBF Dergisi 72 (2)
Edward Said vs Michel Foucault:
The Divergence of Perspectives on Knowledge,
Truth and Power
Introduction
In his early studies, particularly Beginnings (1974) and Orientalism
(1979a) Edward W. Said recognizes the importance of Michel Foucault‘s works
particularly the Archaeology of Knowledge (1972) and Discipline and Punish
(1977) in the shaping of his views, and acknowledges that Orientalism could
not have been written without Foucault‘s works and some key Foucauldian
concepts such as discourse, genealogy, domination, and knowledge/power.
Indeed, many interpretations of Said also highlight the influential role of
Foucault in the writings of Said (e.g., Ashcroft and Ahluwalia, 2008; Kennedy,
2013; Racevskis, 2005; Salusinszky, 1987; Selby, 2006; Turner, 1994;
Marrouchi, 2012).
However, Said seriously questions his former inclination towards
Foucault in his writings and interviews in the 1980s and 1990s even if he was
fascinated with the writings of Foucault. Therefore, Foucault cannot be seen ―as
an inspiring intellectual‖ in his later works such as Culture and Imperialism
(1994), The Question of Palestine (1979b), The Politics of Dispossession
(1995b), Peace and its Discontents (1995a), Blaming the Victims (2001a),
Covering Islam (1997) and his interviews (e.g., 2001c; 2004). Furthermore,
Said not only takes a distanced and dissatisfied position toward Foucault, but
also becomes one of the leading critics of Foucault‘s understanding of power,
knowledge and truth in his later works.
In this article, drawing on Said‘s works, I aim to exhibit Said‘s divergence
from Foucault and to understand why Said moves away from Foucault. I firstly
examine the convergence of Said with Foucault on the relationship between
discourse, knowledge and power in Orientalism and then manifest the divergence of
Said from Foucault in terms of his understanding of power and truth and his
dedication to universal principles such as justice, freedom and equality. Taken
together, this article shows that even if a Foucauldian perspective, that is the lack of
truth and justice outside discourse and power, is an apparent reference point in his
early writings, particularly in Orientalism, to understand the construction of
Orientalism in the West, Said moves toward the opposed pole of the intellectual
tradition dedicating to ―speaking truth to power‖ because of the hopelessness of
Foucauldian theory in the defense of universal values such as justice and freedom
against the oppressor.
Fatih Varol Edward Said vs Michel Foucault: The Divergence of Perspectives on
Knowledge, Truth and Power
317
1. Convergences: Orientalism as a Discourse and
the Representation of Power
Drawing on Foucault‘s work, Said uses the concept of discourse in order
to understand the construction of the Orient as a totality. For Foucault (1972),
discourse is a set of “governing statements” about an issue. Discourse (e.g.,
legal, sexual, nationalist or religious) is not only about language, but also
covers ideas, meaning, and practice; therefore, it is influential in the production
of social, cultural, and political practices. It restricts the way of thinking
because it forms knowledge. Indeed, for Foucault, there is no knowledge
outside discourse. Similar to Foucault, Said also points out that discourse is the
cultural and political configuration of ―textual attitude‖ (Said, 2001b: 92-93),
which is part of cultural definitions shaping any individual experience about a
certain actuality. In Orientalism, Said writes:
―I have found it useful here to employ Michel Foucault's notion of a
discourse, as described by him in the Archaeology of Knowledge and in
Discipline and Punish, to identify Orientalism. My contention is that
without examining Orientalism as a discourse one cannot possibly
understand the enormously systematic discipline by which European
culture was able to manage—and even produce—the Orient politically,
sociologically, militarily, ideologically, scientifically, and imaginatively
during the post-Enlightenment period‖ (Said, 1979a: 3).
Although some elements of orientalism can be seen in the medieval
period of European history as folk beliefs, modern and professional orientalism
began to develop as a response to the changing role of the Middle East in the
18th century for the West because of its political and economic importance in
the colonial period. A normative orientalist discourse developed in the folk
beliefs, travel (...truncated)