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'Who is the Proust of the Paphuans?', Saul Bellow infamously inquired, as if this vast expanse were too small, scattered and backward to deserve consideration. In response to this challenge, Pacific Gateways seeks to define a new (if provisional) canon. This diverse, insightful and compelling collection applies ethnographic perspectives (contact zone, participant-testimony, indigeneity) to a diverse range of genres (romance, travelogue, memoir) to demonstrate how the Pacific already prefigures and generates later networks of global exchange. It offers not retrospect into a distant past, but intimations of possible futures, as a portal into alternative forms of planetary consciousness. (Steve Clark)
This book explores the entanglements of Anglophone literature with Pacic geographies, histories, and cultures during the long nineteenth century, giving a transpacic context to Victorian writers including Dickens, Kingston, Stevenson, and Trollope, and setting them alongside Pacic Rim writers such as Bret Harte, Lafcadio Hearn, Joseph Heco, and Yei Theodora Ozaki. The chapters focus upon the physical and imaginative gateways produced by Western technology,
including the port city, the steamship, telegraph lines, and the networks of international trade and nance. These Pacic gateways shape the development of a transpacic consciousness in Anglophone literature, whose modes of exchange and patterns of thought can still be seen in modern-day attitudes to the region. The book aims to present a polyglot and cross-cultural history of Anglophone literature in the Pacic, in which Anglo-American imperialism coexists with
established intra-Asian networks.
Chapter 1 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License via link.springer.com
Advances scholarship in the intersection between English Literature and Pacific Studies Showcases a range of scholarly perspectives Covers a range of geographies including Japan, China, Australia, New Zealand, Pacific islands, California, and Hawai'i
Auteur
Tomoe Kumojima is a lecturer at Nara Women's University, Japan. She completed her D.Phil. in English at the University of Oxford and published the thesis as a monograph, Victorian Women's Travel Writing on Meiji Japan: Hospitable Friendship (Oxford University Press, 2022).
Laurence Williams is an associate professor in the Department of English Studies at Sophia University in Tokyo. His publications include British Romanticism in Asia(Palgrave, 2019), co-edited with Alex Watson. He has a D.Phil. in English from Oxford, specializing in British travel writing during the long eighteenth century.
Contenu
Chapter 1: Pacific Gateways: Trans-Oceanic Anglophone Literature in the Long Nineteenth Century.- Section 1: Geopolitics of the Pacific.- Chapter 2: Island Logic, Continent Logic: The travelogues and fictions of the First Opium War.- Chapter 3: An Aesthetic Gateway to Japan: Mount Fuji and the Steamship Arrival in British Travel Writing, 18801900.- Chapter 4: Travel Writing on the Date Line: Claiming Lost Days in the Late Nineteenth Century.- Chapter 5: We'll give up old China and live in Japan: George Grossmith's Cups and Saucers (1876) and Britain's Pacific Realignments in the 1870s.- Chapter 6: Footnotes to History: Marginalizing Polynesia in Robert Louis Stevenson's 'The Song of Rahéro' and 'The Feast of Famine' (1890).- Section 2: Port Interactions and Intermediaries.- Chapter 7: Contact Nodes: Ports, Connection, and the World in Anthony Trollope's Australia and New Zealand (1873) and The Way We Live Now (1875).- Chapter 8: Seeking Safe Harbour: W. H. G. Kingston's Pacific Adventure Novels.- Chapter 9. Mutual Interests: Pacific Expansionism and the Reception History of Townsend Harris in Japan and America, 18561959.- Chapter 10: Robert Louis Stevenson's Demystification of the Pacific Copra Trade.- Section 3: Transpacific Identities.- Chapter 11: San Francisco Chinatown as a Romantic Gateway: Transpacific (Dis)continuity in Bret Harte's 'Wan Lee, the Pagan' (1876).- Chapter 12: Literary Diplomacy: Yei Theodora Ozaki, Early Anglo-Japanese Writing, and Transnational Female Networks.- Chapter 13: Joseph Heco's Autobiographical Abjection.- Chapter 14: Robinson Crusoe as a Transpacific Novel: Hospitality, Recognition, Translation.