Your country and preferred language.

Select your country Select language

Denna webbplats använder cookies för att säkerställa att du får den bästa upplevelsen.

Menu
Sökalternativ
Stäng

Välkommen till Sveriges största bokhandel

Här finns så gott som allt som givits ut på den svenska bokmarknaden under de senaste hundra åren.

  • Handla mot faktura och öppet köp i 21 dagar
  • Oavsett vikt och antal artiklar handlar du till enhetsfrakt från samma säljare i samma kundvagn
Travelling Objects Modernity and Maetriality in British Colonial Travel Literature about Africa

Travelling Objects Modernity and Maetriality in British Colonial Travel Literature about Africa

Häftad bok. Umeå Universitet. 2011. 257 + [4] sidor.

Hyggligt skick. Boken har bruks och lagerspår. Slitage kring ryggen. Inlagan har ägarnamnteckning i bläck och flera understrykningar i blyerts, övrigt i gott skick.

Inrikes enhetsfrakt Sverige: 62 SEK
Betala med Swish

Förlagsfakta

ISBN
9789174592757
Titel
Travelling Objects Modernity and Maetriality in British Colonial Travel Literature about Africa
Författare
Hållén, Nicklas
Förlag
Umeå Universitet
Utgivningsår
2011
Omfång
257 sidor
Bandtyp
Häftad
Vikt
538 g
Språk
English
Baksidestext
This study examines the functions of objects in a selection of British colonial travel accounts about Africa. The works discussed were published between 1863 and 1908 and include travelogues by John Hanning Speke, Vemey Lovett Cameron, Henry Morton Stanley, Mary Henrietta Kingsley, Ewart Scott Grogan, Mary Hall and Constance Larymore. The author argues that objects are deeply involved in the construction of pre-modern and modern spheres that the travelling subject moves between. The objects in the travel accounts are studied in relation to a contextual background of Victorian commodity and object culture, epitomised by the 1851 Great Exhibition and the birth of the modem anthropological museum. The four analysis chapters investigate the roles of objects in ethnographical and geographical writing, in ideological discussions about the transformative powers of colonial trade, and in narratives about the arrival of the book in the colonial periphery. As the analysis shows, however, objects tend not to behave as they are expected to do. Instead of marking stable temporal differences, descriptions of objects are typically riddled with contradictions and foreground the ambivalence that characterises colonial literature.