Tourists with Typewriters: Critical Reflections on Contemporary Travel Writing

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University of Michigan Press, 1998 - Всего страниц: 261
The first extensive survey of contemporary travel writing, Tourists with Typewriters offers a series of challenging and provocative critical insights into a wide range of travel narratives written in English after the Second World War. The book focuses in particular on contemporary travel writers such as Jan Morris, Peter Matthiessen, V. S. Naipaul, Barry Lopez, Mary Morris, Paul Theroux, Peter Mayle, and the late Bruce Chatwin. It examines some of the reasons for travel writing's enduring popularity, and for its particular appeal to readers--many of them also travelers--in the present.
The book maps new terrain in a growing area of critical study. Although critical of travel writing's complacency and its often unacknowledged ethnocentrism, the book recognizes its importance as both a literary and cultural form. While travel writing at its worst emerges as a crude expression of economic advantage, at its best it becomes a subtle instrument of cultural self-perception, a barometer for changing views of "other" (i.e., foreign, non-Western) cultures, and a trigger for the information circuits that tap us into the wider world.
Tourists with Typewriters gauges both the best and worst in contemporary travel writing, capturing the excitement of this most volatile--and at times infuriating--of literary genres. The book will appeal to general readers interested in a closer examination of travel writing and to academic readers in disciplines such as literary/cultural studies, geography, history, anthropology, and tourism studies.
"An eminently readable and informative study. It breathes tolerance and intelligence. It is critically perceptive and very au courant. It raises issues (coloniality, postmodernity, gender. . . ) and discusses books that readers of many different stripes will want to find out about." --Ross Chambers, University of Michigan
Patrick Holland, Associate Professor of English, University of Guelph, was born in New Zealand and educated in England, Australia, and Canada. Graham Huggan, Professor of English, University of Munich, was born in Hong Kong and educated in England and in British Columbia.
 

Содержание

Travel Writing Today
1
After Empire
27
Zones
67
Gender and Other Troubles
111
Postmodern Itineraries
157
Travel Writing at the Millennium
197
Notes
219
Works Cited
241
Index
255
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Об авторе (1998)

Patrick Holland was born on August 7, 1977 in Rockhampton, Australia. He is the author of a short story collection entitled The Source of the Sound, which won Salt Publishing's 2010 Scott Prize. His other works include The Mary Smokes Boys, Riding the Trains in Japan, The Darkest Little Room, Navigatio, and One. He is also a founding member of the Asia Pacific Writers and Translators Association.

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