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In this article, I have argued that the idea of creating a “civilizational other” is pivotal to the project of colonization. Political authority over the native cultures cannot be established unless Empires create knowledge which declares them essentially superior to native cultures and civilization. The arrival of the British in the subcontinent is no exception to these hegemonic practices. Natives are made to believe that their cultures, histories, folklores and mythologies are either of marginal importance or need to be revised in terms of western epistemic demands. This way of thought paves way for the reformatory and educational project of the colonizer. The indigenous epistemic structures/narratives are revised or obliterated as they cannot fulfill the modernist demands of progress and enlightenment. My argument is that the erasure is primarily political and not epistemic. I have surveyed the western idea of the construction of the self and other and how in political terms, it becomes instrumental in establishing the western hegemony over the Orient. Furthermore, I have focused on the sub-continental epistemic response to explore the genesis of Muslim identity which paved way for the creation of Pakistan.

Dr Khurshid Alam. (2019) OCCIDENTALISM, ORIENTALISM AND NATIONAL IDENTITY AN EPISTEMOLOGICAL SURVEY, Al-Hikmat: A Journal of Philosophy, Volume 39, Issue 1.
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