Abstract

This article examines the representation of ‘the Orient’ and the dichotomy between ‘East’ and ‘West’ in Byron’s first ‘Turkish Tale’, The Giaour (1813). It argues that Byron’s poem offers a more complex understanding of these relationships than has often been recognised by readings rooted to a greater extent in theoretical constructions of orientalism than in close attention to the narrative of The Giaour, its paratexts, and its engagement with contemporary historical events. Conversely, through a reading of the poem focused on these aspects, the article hopes to make clear that Byron stages not a simplistic dichotomy between ‘East’ and ‘West’, but rather the inevitable instability of borders and cultural identities.

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