ABSTRACT

Despite the recent increase in scholarly activity regarding travel writing and the accompanying proliferation of publications relating to the form, its ethical dimensions have yet to be theorized with sufficient rigour.

Drawing from the disciplines of anthropology, linguistics, literary studies and modern languages, the contributors in this volume apply themselves to a number of key theoretical questions pertaining to travel writing and ethics, ranging from travel-as-commoditization to encounters with minority languages under threat. Taken collectively, the essays assess key critical legacies from parallel disciplines to the debate so far, such as anthropological theory and postcolonial criticism. Also considered, and of equal significance, are the ethical implications of the form’s parallel genres of writing, such as ethnography and journalism. As some of the contributors argue, innovations in these genres have important implications for the act of theorizing travel writing itself and the mode and spirit in which it continues to be conducted. In the light of such innovations, how might ethical theory maintain its critical edge?

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Ethics on the Move

chapter 1|15 pages

Speech Acts

Language, Mobility, and Place

chapter 2|21 pages

From Legislative to Interpretive Modes of Travel

Space, Ethics, and Literary Form in Jean Baudrillard's America

chapter 3|25 pages

Fiction and Affect

Anglophone Travel Writing and the Case of Paraguay

chapter 4|14 pages

Terror

chapter 5|17 pages

Victor Segalen in the Contact Zone

Exoticism, Ethics, and the Traveler and “Travelee”

chapter 8|15 pages

Gourdes and Dollars

How Travel Writers Spend Money

chapter 9|18 pages

Writing across the Native/Foreign Divide

The Case of Kapka Kassabova's Street Without a Name

chapter 10|21 pages

“Like a Member of a Free Nation, He Wrote Without Shame”

Foreign Travelers as a Trope in Romanian Cultural Tradition 1

chapter 12|15 pages

The Rhetorics of Arctic Discourse

Reading Gretel Ehrlich's This Cold Heaven in Class

chapter 13|12 pages

Hauntings

W. G. Sebald as Travel Writer