ABSTRACT

This collection examines the intersections between the personal and the political in travel writing, and the dialectic between mobility and stasis, through an analysis of specific cases across geographical and historical boundaries. The authors explore the various ways in which travel texts represent actual political conditions and thus engage in discussions about national, transnational, and global citizenship; how they propose real-world political interventions in the places where the traveler goes; what tone they take toward political or socio-political violence; and how they intersect with political debates. Travel writing can be viewed as political in a purely instrumental sense, but, as this volume also demonstrates, travel writing’s reception and ideological interventions also transform personal and cultural realities. This book thus examines the ways in which politics’ material effects inform and intersect with personal experience in travel texts and engage with travel’s dialectic of mobility and stasis. In spite of globalization and efforts to eradicate the colonial vision in travel writing and in travel writing criticism, this vision persists in various and complex ways. While the travelogue can be a space of discursive and direct oppression, these essays suggest that the travelogue is also a narrative space in which the traveler employs the genre to assert authority over his or her experiences of mobility. This book will be an important contribution for interdisciplinary scholars with interests in travel writing studies, global and transnational studies, women’s studies, multicultural studies, the social sciences, and history.

part I|42 pages

Travel and the Politics of Perception

chapter 1|13 pages

“The Pain of 40 Lashes”

Anton Chekhov's Sakhalin Island and the Emergence of the Russian Prison System

chapter 2|16 pages

Traveling Lies

Bruce Chatwin's In Patagonia and Adrián Giménez Hutton's La Patagonia de Chatwin

chapter 3|11 pages

“Road to Road”

Syncretism and the Politics of Identity in M. G. Vassanji's A Place Within

part II|46 pages

Gender and Sexuality

chapter 4|14 pages

Clashing Tastes

European Femininity and Race in Maria Graham's Journal of a Voyage to Brazil

chapter 5|14 pages

Exceptional Perspectives

National Identity in US Women's Travel Accounts of Greece, 1840–1913

chapter 6|16 pages

Great Mirrors Shattered

John Whittier Treat and the Politics of Queer Travels through Gay Japan

part III|42 pages

Race, Ethnicity, and Otherness

part IV|54 pages

Empire

chapter 10|12 pages

Traveling to Ithaca

chapter 12|14 pages

“Picturesque in Its Motley Processions”

The Infrastructure of Empire in Emily Eden's Up the Country 1

chapter 13|12 pages

Seeing with a New Lens

Louise Arner Boyd's Polar Expeditions

part V|44 pages

Travel, Globalization, and Geopolitics

chapter 14|15 pages

Seeing for Themselves

US Travel Writers in Early Revolutionary Cuba

chapter 15|13 pages

“And I am the King of May”

Allen Ginsberg's Travel Poetry and the Cold War Politics of Dissent

chapter 16|14 pages

From 香港 to Hà Nội

Travel Guidebook Writing as a Political Act