Title: Becoming Strangers:
1Becoming Strangers
- Travel, Trust, and the Everyday.
- Day Eleven Travel Writing
2 The Middle World Revisited
- When, like Mary Rowlandson, people find
themselves thrown into the middle world they
often try to make sense of it by - Trying to match what you observe to your
customary sense of place - Trying to learn if where you are is organized
according to a different logic of place - Regardless, they have a tendency to attend much
more closely to unfamiliar particulars, ones they
cannot place.
3The Middle World Revisited, Contd
- Some peopleanthropologists, for exampleare
particularly interested in mastering the new
place they inhabit. - Othersnatural scientists, for examplefind it
useful to be unhoused. They record unfamiliar
particularsand sometimes learn new ways of
thinking about them, or even new ways to perceive
them. - Then there are tourists.
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5Travel Writing
- Begins in 1st 2nd centuries CE, with writers
such as Strabo Pausanius, who describe distant
provinces of the Roman empire. - Starts again in 13th century with Marco Polo and
other travelers to Asia along spice routes. - Picks up in 17th and 18th centuries tales of
European voyages to Asia and New World.
Coincides with expansion of European empires.
Becomes serious art, written by Goethe
others. - 19th century classics include Charles Montagu
Doughtys Travels in Arabia Deserta (1888) and
Lafcadio Hearns Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan
(1894).
6Robert Byron (1905-1941)
- Educated at Eton and Oxford.
- One of the Bright Young Things along with
Evelyn Waugh, Harold Acton, Anthony Powell, and
Nancy Mitford. - Problem of education beyond his means
prepared to be man of leisure yet no family
money. - Isnt Robert simply killing? He seems to hate
everything which ordinary people like!
7- Byron at MOUNT ATHOS
- Eastern Orthodox monastic settlement that dates
back to 963 CE. - Isolated peninsula jutting into Aegean Sea. No
women or female animals allowed down to today. - Incredible trove of art books.
8Byzantine Mosaics from Hagia Sophia
- Early 6th Century CE, from during the reign of
Justinian I - Imperial church in Contantinople (today Istanbul)
- Flattened, stylized, geometric figures against
gold backgrounds
9The Road to Oxiana (1937)
- Recounts Byrons travels to from Persia
Afghanistan in 1933-34 in quest of the origins of
Islamic architecture. - What Ulysses is to the novel between the wars,
and what The Waste Land is to poetry, The Road to
Oxiana is to the travel book. (Paul Fussell). - Very popular among later British travel writers,
including Eric Newby, Colin Thubron and Bruce
Chatwin.
10Ottoman Empire, Asian Possessions, Before World
War I
11The British Empire in the Middle East during the
1930s
12The Road to Oxiana (1937)
- Looks like a journalprovides dates places.
Written, though, in the form of anecdotes,
mini-dramas, rants, and short artsy effusions.
A mosaic style. - Casts himself others in roles, often
stereotypical ones, sometimes contradictory ones.
- Desire for good story or punchline shapes the
narrative. - Like almost all travel writing, focus ends up
being as much on him as on the things he
describes.
13The Road to Oxiana (1937)
- Byron thoroughly aware of life-as-theater
roles, setting, dialogue, action, etc. - Road to Oxiana shows the British Empire
(Marjoribanks) in action who behaves how,
where, when, why. - Attention especially to the imposition of one
place on another, and on the struggles between
competing visions of place. - Byron implicates himself in the system that he
describes. Highlights his own prejudices
privileges even as he makes us think twice about
British imperialism.
14King David Hotelor Dome of the Rock?
15The Buddhas of Bamiyan (4th-5th centuries CE)
Statues erected in pass in Afghanistan linking
Asia Minor to South Asia. In Oxiana, Robert
Byron called them ugly derivative. In 2002,
the Taliban destroyed the Buddhas. How would
Byron have responded why?