). The concept has been used in both "Eastern" and "Western" nations.
Japanese
sinologist Tachibana Shiraki, in the 1920s, wrote of the need to unify Asia—
East Asia,
Southeast Asia and
South Asia but excluding
Central Asia and
West Asia—and form a "New East" that might combine culturally in balancing against the West. Japan continued to make much of the concept, known as
Pan-Asianism, throughout
World War II, in
propaganda. In China, it was encapsulated during the
Cold War in a 1957 speech by
Mao Zedong, who launched a slogan when he said, "This is a war between two worlds. The West Wind cannot prevail over the East Wind; the East Wind is bound to prevail over the West Wind." percentages: green 50% and above, yellow 10-49% To Western writers, in the 1940s, it became bound up with an idea of aggressive, "frustrated nationalism", which was seen as "intrinsically anti- or non-Western"; sociologist
Frank Furedi wrote, "The already existing intellectual assessment of European nationalism adapted to the growth of the Third World variety by developing the couplet of mature Western versus immature Eastern nationalism.... This East-West dichotomy became an accepted part of Western political theory."
Iraqi novelist
Dhu'l-Nun Ayyub would include aspects of this concept in his stories. An example can be found in his story "
al-Dutkur Ibrahim" that portrays the character, Dr. Ibrahim, being the epitome of evil and corruption, and an
anglophile who turns against his people's interests. Another example is in his 1957 story "
Orphans on Christmas Day" in which an Iranian Man and a Viennese woman overcome cultural differences to be together. The story is regarded by critics as an allegory for potential peace between East and West during the height of colonialism. The 1978 book
Orientalism, by
Edward Said, was highly influential in further establishing concepts of the East–West dichotomy in the Western world, bringing into college lectures a notion of the East as seen as "characterized by religious sensibilities, familial social orders, and ageless traditions" in contrast to Western "rationality, material and technical dynamism, and individualism." More recently, the divide has also been posited as an Islamic "East" and an American and European "West." Critics note that an Islamic/non-Islamic East–West dichotomy is complicated by the global dissemination of
Islamic fundamentalism and by cultural diversity within Islamic nations, moving the argument "beyond that of an East-West dichotomy and into a tripartite situation." == Applications ==