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Travel and Travelogues: Quest and Conquest (Tunis)

Travel and Travelogues: Quest and Conquest (Tunis)

Publié le par Université de Lausanne (Source : Lobna Ben Salem)

UNIVERSITY OF MANOUBA

FACULTY OF LETTERS, ARTS AND HUMANITIES - MANOUBA

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT

 

Conference on "Travel and Travelogues: Quest and Conquest" –

22 and 23 February 2019

 

Concept Note

The travelogue, travel book and adventure book refer to a literary genre which is as old as travel itself. The genre includes notes, records and works about exploration and adventure in foreign lands. The travelogue can take the form of a diary, an essay, a poem, a short story, a novel or a book. It could relate an actual authentic experience or an imagined one. The earliest travelogue goes back to the fourteenth Century B.C in Egypt with the anonymous record known as The Journeying  of  the Master of  Captains of Egypt, then,  The  Histories of  Herodotus  (485 BC), followed by other records in Greek literature and Greek mythology, mainly, the narrative of Xenophon (430 BC) telling about the return from Sardis and the one by Roman Horace (65 BC).

The tradition of travel writing was then revived by Ibn Battutah in the fourteenth century who recorded his twenty-eight year trip, and Al Fasi in the fifteenth century who reported on his journey in the Mediterranean. Indeed, travel writing flourished in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries thanks to the increase in the number of sailors as sailing techniques had developed and the world had become more navigable. Explorers at the time included Vasco Da Gama, Columbus, Francisco  de  Alvarez, and others. Reports by those explorers have  set  the  travelogue  as  a recognizable literary genre which reached its apogee in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Landmarks  of  the  time  included  Montesquieu’s  Lettres  Persanes  (1721),  Defoe’s  A  Tour through the whole Island of Great Britain (1724) and Johnson’s Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland (1775).

In the nineteenth century, the travel book gained more popularity and it had an important role in shaping and promoting the ideologies of the empire. Travellers, at the time, went beyond the European  continent  and  wrote  about  the  visited  lands,  usually  considered  as  the  “outside” world: uncivilized, empty, awkward, inferior, savage, exotic… Travellers’ records on what they had experienced provided an evidence for the supporters of the colonizing project to prove the necessity  of  exploiting  the lands 'discovered'.  Personal  experiences  of  travellers  had  been presented as universalized knowledge, and inhabitants of the visited areas were homogenized as inferior species. This belief was 'backed' by the work of science and anthropology and coincided with the publication of Darwin’s book The Origin of Species (1858). In brief, travel writing was perceived  as  a  sub-story of the  grand  narrative  of Imperialism  as  it  paved  the  way  for  the colonial adventure.

Even more, the  journey has gathered an oedipal “resonance”: the  moment of leaving  home  is an illustration of the traveller’s rejection of the paternal authority, an evolution from adolescence to adulthood, and an escape from all ties: “a refutation of the father and a denial of intimacy with the mother, the necessary condition of entry into language and access unto law,” as Clark puts it in  his  book Travel  Writing  and  Empire.  Travelling  fulfils an everlasting  desire  to escape home, cross the sea and come back as a “hero”. It satisfies a desire within the child to go further than the father and be beyond his reach. It is, indeed, a quest of an identity set against the one of the “other” encountered in the visited areas. Thus, the traveller makes a shift from “seeing” to “witnessing” which means that they “see a fragment and then imagine the rest in the act of appropriation,” as Greenblatt explains it. The journey is also not free from “paranoia”: an anxiety  of  being  entrapped  and  absorbed  by  the  new  space.  That  is  why,  narratives  in travelogues turn around the subtle, entangled relationship between “seeing,” “watching” and “witnessing” as the traveller proves the desire to be “here” where they are and “there” where they were, and there is no better way to fulfil such a desire other than writing.

It  is  worth  noting,  however,  that  travel  writing  has  for  long  been  considered  a  patriarchal privilege from which the female figure has either been absented or marginalized. The records of women travellers are very scarce and they were considered as no more than silly records of some sensitive, delicate feelings by a sensitive creature whose narratives cannot be “objective” or “trustworthy”. There is no better example to illustrate the woman’s place in travel literature  than  that  of  Penelope  (Odysseus’s  wife)  in  Greek  mythology  who  spent  her  life waiting  for  the  return of her  husband  from his  journey.  Another  role  of the  female  in  travel writing is “the guardian of the memory,” the one who memorizes the action rather than performs it: a role played by the housekeeper in Odysseus’s myth who could recognize him when he came back because of the scar in his feet. Nevertheless, the way an adventurer portrays the visited areas reveals a strong parallel between the land and the female body: both are desired, objectified  and  subordinated.  Such a parallel has been  inspiring  feminist  theorists and  post- colonial ones as a space from where to “speak”.

In a modern context characterized by fluidity of space because of globalization, travel writing has put on a new garb and acquired new themes. Indeed, new concerns have come to the surface, mainly tourist ones, without however cutting with old motifs: mainly, the quest for identity. With new waves of immigration, writers blurred their experiences  into  a developed  concern with comparative studies rather than focusing on a target culture. Immigrant writers tend to compare the narratives of the host society with the ones back home, as they seek to find “their” space. This new tendency has much in common with “exile” literature which flourished in the beginning of the twentieth century.

Accordingly, travel writing emerges as an intersective area where different disciplines and theories meet. It developed through history, and it closely enmeshed with the individual and the community. It is also a field of study where the literal and the metaphorical merge and where it is hard to draw the line between what is 'authentic' and what is imagined.

 

Areas of interest

- The journey (quest -  exploration -  intrusion) motif

- The gaze (seeing - watching - witnessing - telling) motif

- The memory (the objective - the subjective) motif

- The expansive (the authoritative - the romanticized - the ideologized - the manipulative - the demonizational - the oedipal – the hero making) motif

- The competing narratives (grand-/mega-narratives vs narratives/counter-narratives) motif

- The encounter (comparative - target culture focus - home culture focus - look (talk / tell)

back in anger - love and hate) motif

- The language (bond - bondage) motif  – travelling “words” or “words” of travelling

- The translational (loyalty pulls - representation/misrepresentation) motif.

 

Conference Formats

The Conference will comprise plenary sessions and panels. Doctoral students are encouraged to submit Abstracts for the panels.

Kindly, submit an Abstract of no longer than 250 words (together with a short list of keywords).

 

Conference Venue

Faculty of Letters, Arts and Humanities - Manouba

Address: Manouba - 2010 / Tunis (TUNISIA)

 

Important Dates:

Deadline to submit Abstracts: 15 October 2018

Notification of acceptance: 15 November 2018

Final paper submission: 15 January 2019

Please send your abstract to: englishdepartment.manouba@gmail.com

 

Organizing Committee:

-  Mohamed Mansouri 

- Sadok Bouhlila

-Anne Murray

- Nabil Cherni

- Lobna Ben Salem

-Oussama Ayara

- Hajer Yousfi

-Amel Jaidi

-Nadia Bouchhioua

-Hajer Miledi

-Faiza Derbel

-Dorra Touzri

 

For any enquiry, please contact: englishdepartment.manouba@gmail.com