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Pacific Possessions
Chris J. Thomas
其他書名
The Pursuit of Authenticity in Nineteenth-Century Oceanian Travel Accounts
出版
University of Alabama Press
, 2021-05-25
主題
Literary Criticism / General
Literary Criticism / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Literary Criticism / Modern / General
Literary Criticism / Modern / 19th Century
Travel / General
Travel / Australia & Oceania
Travel / Essays & Travelogues
Travel / Special Interest / Literary
ISBN
0817320946
9780817320942
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=CUcpEAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Reframes Polynesia and Melanesia through analysis of nineteenth-century travel writing
In
Pacific Possessions: The Pursuit of Authenticity in Nineteenth-Century Oceanian Travel Accounts,
Chris J. Thomas expands the literary canon on Polynesia and Melanesia beyond the giants, such as Herman Melville and Jack London, to include travel narratives by British and American visitors. These accounts were widely read and reviewed when they first appeared but have largely been ignored by scholars. For the first time, Thomas defines these writings as a significant literary genre.
Recovering these works allows us to reconceive of nineteenth-century Oceania as a vibrant hub of cultural interchange.
Pacific Possessions
recaptures the polyphony of voices that enlivened this space through the writing of these travelers, while also paying attention to their Oceanian interlocutors. Each chapter centers on a Pacific cultural marker, what Thomas refers to as each writer’s “possession”: the Tongan tattoo, the Hawaiian hula, the Fijian cannibal fork, and Robert Louis Stevenson’s cache of South Seas photographs.
Thomas analyzes how westerners formed narratives around these objects and what those objects meant within nineteenth-century Oceanian cultures. He argues that the accounts served to shape a version of Oceanian authenticity that persists today. The profiled traveler-writers had complex experiences, at times promoting exoticized exaggerations of so-called authentic Polynesian and Melanesian cultures and at other times genuinely engaging in cultural exchange. However, their views were ultimately compromised by a western lens. In Thomas’s words, “the authenticity is at once celebrated and written over.”