
In-Between Two Worlds
Narratives by Female Explorers and Travellers 1850-1945
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 15. July 2009
Book
Hardback
202 pages
978-1-4331-0597-5 (ISBN)
Description
Fourteen essays provide a challenging outlook on narratives by women explorers and travellers from five different continents, spanning nearly one century from 1850 to 1945. The map thus drawn enables one to revisit, restore, and reassess the content and the originality of these narratives by women. The essays are relevant to the fields of travel writing and gender studies, and all draw from referential contemporary theoretical and critical works (Michel Foucault, Homi Bhabha, Edward Said, Roland Barthes, Michel de Certeau, Gilles Deleuze, Sara Mills, Kristi Siegel, and Jane Robinson). The main interest and originality of the volume result from the perspectives adopted by the different authors. The text-oriented analyses rely on close reading, thus definitely providing accurate and perceptive critical insights into the narratives. Such perspective precludes erasing the differential features characterizing each geographical space and each travelling subject. It also moves away from any temptation at creating a naturalized mythical image of these women.
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Illustrations
num. ill.
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 165 mm
Thickness: 16 mm
Weight
489 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4331-0597-5 (9781433105975)
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
The Editors: Béatrice Bijon is Senior Lecturer at Saint-Etienne University, France. Her research focuses on British post-modernist fiction, post-colonial writing (India and Australia), and gender studies. Bijon has published articles on Angela Carter, Valery Larbaud and Joyce, Janet Frame, Shirley Hazzard, Arundhati Roy, and Jeanette Winterson. More recently, she has researched on exploration and travel narratives (Vivienne de Watteville, David Thompson, and Alexander McKenzie). She is the co-editor of Europeans Writing the Mezzogiorno (2006) and The Production of Strangeness in Post-Colonial Literatures (forthcoming). She is currently preparing a book on the suffragettes.
Gérard Gâcon is Senior Lecturer at Saint-Etienne University, France. He is the author of a collection of his own poetry (Poinçons, 2007), a book on the translation and hermeneutics of poetry (Le Lait de paradis, 2005), and various translations of English poets (Sidney, Shakespeare, Herrick, Marvell, Coleridge, Carroll) in bilingual editions. Gâcon has also contributed 101 texts of his own plus 76 in collaboration with Paul Bensimon to the prestigious Anthologie bilingue de la poésie anglaise (2005). His research has also investigated the realm of literary biography (John Aubrey) and autobiography (Wordsworth), and more recently, travel literature (Mungo Park, Mary Kingsley, Fanny Parks).
Content
Contents: Beatrice Bijon/Gerard Gacon: Introduction: Excursions into Women's Travel Writing - Jane Robinson: Supporters or Subversives? Mixed Messages from Women Travellers in the Theatre of War - Carmen Birkle: Traveling and the Discourse of Economy in Nancy Prince's Travel Narrative - Helene Cheynet: <<Travellers Are Privileged to Do the Most Improper Things with Perfect Propriety.>> Isabella Bird's A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains - Elisabeth Bouzonviller: Klee Wyck: A Canadian Exploration amidst a Totem Pole Forest - Floriane Reviron: Isabella Bird's in Japan: Unbeaten Tracks in Travel Literature - Gerard Gacon: An Emancipated View of the Other: Fanny Parks in India - Hubert Malfray: <<There is a Happy Land, Far, Far Away>>: Anna Leonowens or the (Re)Tracing of Harem Life - Arnaud Moussart: A Woman Time-Traveller: Time in Daisy Bates' The Passing of the Aborigines - Jessica Langer: Time, Space, and Perception in Freya Stark's Baghdad Sketches - Carole Bourne-Taylor: Between Distance and Empathy: The Representation of the Desert in Lady Anne Blunt's Pilgrimage to Nejd (1878-79) - Joan Rees: Amelia Edwards's Nile Journey - Valerie Kennedy: Kingsley's Multiple Voices in Travels in West Africa - Gerard Gacon: The Mangrove Deciphered: Mary Kingsley and West Africa - Beatrice Bijon: Vivienne de Watteville's Speaking to the Earth: <<Living Outside Time and Space>> in Africa.