ABSTRACT

First published in 1996. Adventure stories, produced and consumed in vast quantities in eighteenth-, nineteenth- and twentieth-century Europe, narrate encounters between Europeans and the non-European world. They map both European and non-European people and places. In the exotic, uncomplicated and malleable settings of stories like Robinson Crusoe, they make it possible to imagine, and to naturalise and normalise, identities that might seem implausible closer to home. This book discusses the geography of literature and looking at where adventure stories chart colonies and empires, projecting European geographical fantasies onto non-European, real geographies, including the Americas, Africa and Australasia.

chapter 1|21 pages

Introduction

Adventures in the New World

chapter 2|23 pages

Mapping Adventures

Robinson Crusoe and some Victorian Robinsonades

chapter 3|23 pages

Mapping Men

Spaces of adventure and constructions of masculinity in The Young Fur Traders

chapter 4|21 pages

Mapping Empire

Space for boyish men and manly boys in the Australian interior

chapter 5|24 pages

Ambivalence in the Geography of Adventure

Home and away in Daughters of the Dominion

chapter 6|30 pages

Reading and Resistance

Anarchy and anti-imperalism in French extraordinary voyages

chapter 7|18 pages

Unmapping Adventures

Post-colonial Robinsons and Robinsonades

chapter 8|9 pages

Conclusion

Further adventures?