Place matters
gendered geography in Victorian women's travel books about Southeast Asia
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Author
Publication
1996 - Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, N.J, New Jersey
Language
English
Word Count
86,250 words, Guess
Page Count
345 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL789011M
- ISBN-10081352248X
- OCLC Control Number42328891
- OCLC Control Number32778884
- OCLC Control Numberplacemattersgend0000morg
and 3 more
- Library of Congress Control Number95021408
- LibraryThing421599
- Goodreads5128029
Classifications
- DDC820.9/355
- LCCPR788.T72 M67 1996
Description
Susan Morgan's study of materials and regions previously neglected in contemporary postcolonial studies begins with the transforming premise that "place matters." Concepts derived from writings about one area of the world cannot simply be transposed to another area, in some sort of global theoretical move. Moreover, place in the discourse of Victorian imperialism is a matter of gendered as well as geographic terms. Taking up works by Anna Forbes and Marianne North on the Malay Archipelago, by Margaret Brooke and Harriette McDougall on Sarawak, by Isabella Bird and Emily Innes on British Malaya, by Anna Leonowens on Siam, Morgan also makes extensive use of theorists whose work on imperialism in Southeast Asia is unfamiliar to most American academics. This vivid examination of a different region and different writings emphasizes that in Victorian literature there was no monolithic imperialist location, authorial or geographic. The very notion of a "colony" or an "imperial presence" in Southeast Asia is problematic. Morgan is concerned with marking the intersections of particular Victorian imperial histories and constructions of subjectivity. She argues that specific places in Southeast Asia have distinctive, and differing, masculine imperial rhetorics. It is within these specific rhetorical contexts that women's writings, including their moments of critique, can be read.
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