Cruising with Robert Louis Stevenson: Travel, Narrative, and the Colonial Body

Cruising with Robert Louis Stevenson: Travel, Narrative, and the Colonial Body

by Oliver S. Buckton
Cruising with Robert Louis Stevenson: Travel, Narrative, and the Colonial Body

Cruising with Robert Louis Stevenson: Travel, Narrative, and the Colonial Body

by Oliver S. Buckton

Hardcover(ANN)

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Overview

Cruising with Robert Louis Stevenson: Travel, Narrative, and the Colonial Body is the first book-length study about the influence of travel on Robert Louis Stevenson’s writings, both fiction and nonfiction. Within the contexts of late-Victorian imperialism and ethnographic discourse, the book offers original close readings of individual works by Stevenson while bringing new theoretical insights to bear on the relationship between travel, authorship, and gender identity.

Oliver S. Buckton develops “cruising” as a critical term, linking Stevenson’s leisurely mode of travel with the striking narrative motifs of disruption and fragmentation that characterize his writings. Buckton follows Stevenson’s career from his early travel books to show how Stevenson’s major works of fiction, such as Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and The Ebb-Tide, derive from the innovative techniques and materials Stevenson acquired on his global travels.

Exploring Stevenson’s pivotal role in the revival of “romance” in the late nineteenth century, Cruising with Robert Louis Stevenson highlights Stevenson’s treatment of the human body as part of his resistance to realism, arguing that the energies and desires released by travel are often routed through resistant or comic corporeal figures. Buckton also focuses on Stevenson’s writing about the South Seas, arguing that his groundbreaking critiques of European colonialism are formed in awareness of the fragility and desirability of Polynesian bodies and landscapes.

Cruising with Robert Louis Stevenson will be indispensable to all admirers of Stevenson as well as of great interest to readers of travel writing, Victorian ethnography, gender studies, and literary criticism.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780821417560
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Publication date: 06/14/2007
Edition description: ANN
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Oliver S. Buckton is an associate professor of English at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, where he teaches Victorian literature, critical theory, and film. He is the author of Secret Selves: Confession and Same-Sex Desire in Victorian Autobiography and has published essays on Dickens, Stevenson, Wilde, and Schreiner.

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments     ix
Introduction     1
Travel and the (Re)animated Body
Reanimating Stevenson's Corpus     35
The Beast in the Mountains: Misusing the Ass in Travels with a Donkey     67
Mapping the Historical Romance
"Faithful to his map": Profit, Desire, and the Ends of Travel in Treasure Island     97
"Mr. Betwixt-and-Between": History, Travel, and Narrative Indeterminacy in Kidnapped     126
Travel and Ethnography in the South Seas
"A quarry of materials": The Fictional History of Stevenson's South Seas Cruises     151
"Buridan's donkey": The (Para)texts of Samoan Colonial History in David Balfour and A Footnote to History     181
Rewriting the Imperial Romance
"The White Man's Quarrel": Sexuality, Travel, and Colonialism in Stevenson's South Sea Tales     215
"There's an end to it": Disease and Partnership in The Ebb-Tide     245
Notes     271
Bibliography     329
Index     339
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