https://doi.org/10.1177/0021989420920343 COMMONWEAL TH LITERA TURE COMMONWEAL TH LITERA TURE THE JOURNAL OF The Journal of Commonwealth Literature 1–18 © The Author(s) 2020 Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissions DOI: 10.1177/0021989420920343 journals.sagepub.com/home/jcl Representing the representers: Non-Western depictions of Orientalists and Orientalism in Turkish, Mexican, and Bengali writing Ian Almond Georgetown University, Qatar Abstract How do writers from regions with a historical experience of colonialism depict Western Orientalists in their work? What exactly does it mean to “reverse the gaze” and include the Orientalist within the frame of representation? The article considers the non-Western representation of Orientalists and Orientalism in literary texts from three different regions (Turkey, Mexico, and Bengal), concentrating in particular on Oguz Atay’s Tutunamayanlar (The Disconnected), Ignacio Padilla’s Antipodes, and Amitav Ghosh’s In an Antique Land, but also referring to a wide selection of other texts in the process. It suggests three categories of such representation — parodic, empathetic, and authoritative, in ascending order of sympathy — and proposes, in the analysis of the various fictitious representations of Orientalists examined, a central link between Orientalism and the sacred. Finally, the question of the ironic representation of Orientalists — the extent to which a redemptive irony is adopted by structures of power as a tool of self-preservation — is also considered. Keywords comparative literature, orientalism, Amitav Ghosh, orientalist, representation Jacques Casanova and Pierre Loti thought that they had seen the East because they drank coffee in the reception quarters of some Turkish palaces’ villas. But they never saw the real Orient [Asıl Şark görünmeyen]. Ömer Seyfettin, “The Secret Temple”/“Gizli Mâbed” (Seyfettin, 1988: 301) Corresponding author: Ian Almond, Georgetown University, Georgetown University in Qatar Education City, PO Box 23689, Doha, Qatar, Washington, DC 20057-0004, USA. Email: ia265@georgetown.edu 920343JCL 0 0 10.1177/0021989420920343The Journal of Commonwealth LiteratureAlmond research-article 2020 Article