Search
  Shop

Africa Travel

Australia Travel

Canada Travel

China Travel

European Travel

Japan Travel

Middle Eastern Travel

South America Travel

UK Travel

US Travel

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Home

Africa Travel

Imperial Eyes
Email a friendEmailView larger imageZoom

Imperial Eyes

SKU:  

Availability:   Usually ships in 1 business days
 

How has travel writing produced "the rest of the world" for European readerships?

How does one speak of transculturation from the colonies to the metropolis?

Studies in colonial and exploration discourse have identified the enormous significance of travel writing as an ideological apparatus of Empire. The study of travel writing has, however, remained either naively celebratory or dismissive, treating texts as symptoms of imperial ideologies.

Imperial Eyes explores European travel and exploration writing, in connection with European economic and political expansion since 1700. It is both a study in genre, and a critique of ideology. Pratt examines how travel books by Europeans create the domestic subject of European imperialism, and how they engage metropolitan reading publics with expansionist enterprises whose material benefits accrued mainly to the very few. These questions are addressed through readings of particular travel accounts connected with particularhistorical transitions, from the eighteenth century to Paul Theroux: sentimental travel writing and its links with abolitionist rhetoric, discursive reinventions of South America during the period of its independence (1800-1840), and eighteenth-century European writings on Southern Africa in the context of inland expansion.

 
List Price: $39.95
Our Price: $31.96 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
You Save: $7.99 (19%)
 
 

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.


Product Details
Average Customer Rating: based on 3 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.0
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

1 of 2 found the following review helpful:

5Fantastic book  May 04, 2006
Vituperative, scathing truths about the world they don't teach you in high school make this an excellent book for anyone who likes to uncover the scandal beneath social, economic, and political realities formed in history. Pratt's poignant and stinging language drives home every point in a very sophistocated and flowing discourse. If you haven't taken a college course in Sociology, Africana, or Latin American Studies or similar, this language may be new to you but Pratt makes it as easy as watching an on-the-edge-of-your-seat sports match.

12 of 12 found the following review helpful:

5Seminal book in the field  Apr 06, 2004
While I understand this book presents a challenge to the reader, it is a seminal book in several fields: Mary Louise Pratt's prose is clear for a literary theorist and her vocabulary/jargon is appropriate to the subject. _Imperial Eyes_ takes the reader through several stages of European travel writing, and the effects these works have upon European representations and constructions of the "other." Pratt's strongest arguments deal with Mary Kingsley and Africa, in my personal opinion, but her work on Linneaus is important and relevant to history and to identity studies as well. As a professor, I would assign this book to an upper-division undergraduate course, and would expect students to have the ability to grapple with her argument and her prose. I recommend this book to anyone who wants to have a better understanding of the formation of modern European identity, the ideological underpinnings of colonialism, and the construction of the "other."

19 of 52 found the following review helpful:

2Refreshing perspective, but obscurity overpowers message  Mar 12, 2000
Mary Louise Pratt has a lot of fresh and important things to say, but her writing style makes this book tough to read. I consider myself a good reader, I can usually pick out main ideas and meanings quite easily, but I found this book really frustratingly hard to read! Pratt flip-flops between a readable, clear style and one in which she employs almost indeciperable sentences. I think her message is really important and structurally, "Imperial Eyes" is smartly organized, but it takes a lot of patience and re-reading to understand it.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 About UsContact Us
TravelMVP.comBusinessMVP.com