This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services

Edinburgh University Press

Home Edinburgh University Press 6 ‘TRAVEL WRITING AND ITS THEORY’
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

6 ‘TRAVEL WRITING AND ITS THEORY’

© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. NOTE ON THE TEXTS ix
  4. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS x
  5. PUBLISHER’S ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS xi
  6. INTRODUCTION: WHAT IS TRANSATLANTIC LITERARY STUDIES? 1
  7. PART I THE NATION AND COSMOPOLITANISM
  8. THE NATION AND COSMOPOLITANISM: INTRODUCTION 17
  9. 1 ‘COPYRIGHTING AMERICAN HISTORY: INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT AND THE PERIODIZATION OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY’ 23
  10. 2 ‘THE TRANSNATIONAL TURN: REDISCOVERING AMERICAN STUDIES IN A WIDER WORLD’ 31
  11. 3 ‘NINETEENTH-CENTURY UNITED STATES LITERARY CULTURE AND TRANSNATIONALITY’ 35
  12. 4 ‘NATIONAL NARRATIVES, POSTNATIONAL NARRATION’ 39
  13. 5 ‘TRANSNATIONALISM AND CLASSIC AMERICAN LITERATURE’ 44
  14. 6 ‘THE LIMITS OF COSMOPOLITANISM AND THE CASE FOR TRANSLATION’ 53
  15. 7 ‘BETWEEN EMPIRES: FRANCES CALDERÓN DE LA BARCA’S LIFE IN MEXICO’ 58
  16. 8 ‘PRINCIPLES OF A HISTORY OF WORLD LITERATURE’ 65
  17. PART II THEORIES AND PRACTICE OF COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
  18. THEORIES AND PRACTICE OF COMPARATIVE LITERATURE: INTRODUCTION 75
  19. 1 ‘GENERAL, COMPARATIVE, AND NATIONAL LITERATURE’ 80
  20. 2 ‘NOTES TOWARDS A COMPARISON BETWEEN EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN ROMANTICISM’ 82
  21. 3 ‘ENGLISH ROMANTICISM, AMERICAN ROMANTICISM: WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE?’ 89
  22. 4 ‘CULTURAL TIME IN ENGLAND AND AMERICA’ 97
  23. 5 ‘NATURE AND WALDEN’ 105
  24. 6 ‘ON BEGINNING TO TELL A “BEST-KEPT SECRET”’ 111
  25. 7 ‘NETWORK ANALYSIS: A REAPPRAISAL’ 115
  26. PART III IMPERIALISM AND THE POSTCOLONIAL
  27. IMPERIALISM AND THE POSTCOLONIAL: INTRODUCTION 121
  28. 1 ‘PROSPERO AND CALIBAN’ 126
  29. 2 ‘CULTURAL IDENTITY AND DIASPORA’ 131
  30. 3 ‘THE BLACK ATLANTIC AS A COUNTERCULTURE OF MODERNITY’ 139
  31. 4 ‘AMERICAN LITERARY EMERGENCE AS A POSTCOLONIAL PHENOMENON’ 147
  32. 5 ‘EUROPEAN PEDIGREES/AFRICAN CONTAGIONS: NATIONALITY, NARRATIVE, AND COMMUNITY IN TUTUOLA, ACHEBE, AND REED’ 156
  33. 6 ‘DEEP TIME: AMERICAN LITERATURE AND WORLD HISTORY’ 160
  34. PART IV TRANSLATION
  35. TRANSLATION: INTRODUCTION 167
  36. 1 ‘THE TASK OF THE TRANSLATOR’ 172
  37. 2 ‘ON LINGUISTIC ASPECTS OF TRANSLATION’ 182
  38. 3 ‘THE HERMENEUTIC MOTION’ 184
  39. 4 ‘THE TROPICS OF TRANSLATION’ 189
  40. 5 ‘GENDER AND THE METAPHORICS OF TRANSLATION’ 194
  41. 6 ‘JACK SPICER’S AFTER LORCA: TRANSLATION AS DECOMPOSITION’ 201
  42. 7 ‘THE FRENCH CARIBBEANIZATION OF PHILLIS WHEATLEY: A POETICS OF ANTICOLONIALISM’ 207
  43. PART V STYLE AND GENRE
  44. STYLE AND GENRE: INTRODUCTION 215
  45. 1 ‘ELOQUENCE AND TRANSLATION’ 221
  46. 2 ‘INTRODUCTION: RHIZOME’ 226
  47. 3 ‘TRAVELING GENRES’ 232
  48. 4 ‘INTRODUCTION: HISTORY, MEMORY, AND PERFORMANCE’ 236
  49. 5 ‘ROMANCE AND RATIONAL ORTHODOXY’ 249
  50. 6 ‘THE FAILURE OF GENRE CRITICISM’ 256
  51. 7 ‘EMPIRE AND OCCASIONAL CONFORMITY: DAVID FORDYCE’S COMPLETE BRITISH LETTER-WRITER’ 263
  52. 8 ‘THE AMERICANIZATION OF CLARISSA’ 272
  53. PART VI TRAVEL
  54. TRAVEL: INTRODUCTION 281
  55. 1 ‘REFLECTIONS ON EXILE’ 285
  56. 2 ‘ETHNO-GRAPHY: SPEECH, OR THE SPACE OF THE OTHER: JEAN DE LÉRY’ 291
  57. 3 ‘INTRODUCTION’ TO SEA CHANGES 298
  58. 4 ‘THE REWARDS OF TRAVEL’ 303
  59. 5 ‘INTRODUCTION’ TO IMPERIAL EYES AND ‘HUMBOLDT AS TRANSCULTURATOR’ 312
  60. 6 ‘TRAVEL WRITING AND ITS THEORY’ 316
  61. GLOSSARY OF TERMS 329
  62. INDEX 341
Transatlantic Literary Studies
This chapter is in the book Transatlantic Literary Studies
Downloaded on 23.3.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781474470674-052/html
Scroll to top button