Empire, Tourism, and Colonial Knowledge

Mikko Toivanen
Title
Empire, Tourism, and Colonial Knowledge
Subtitle
in Nineteenth-Century Southeast Asia and Sri Lanka
Price
€ 122,00
ISBN
9789087284664
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
270
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Table of Contents
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List of Figures;
List of Tables;
Acknowledgments;
Introduction;
Chapter 1. Rambles on and off the Page: Writing Colonial Travel;
Chapter 2. Visions of Nature: From Gardens of Eden to Cash Crop Plantations;
Chapter 3. The Walls Are Closing In: Constructing the Colonial City through Travel;
Chapter 4. Encounters on the Road: Empire as a Social Form;
Chapter 5. Leisure in Transit: Styles and Strategies;
Conclusion. The Dance of the Blue Devils: Global Tourism under and after Empire;
Bibliography;
Index

Mikko Toivanen

Empire, Tourism, and Colonial Knowledge

in Nineteenth-Century Southeast Asia and Sri Lanka

This book provides a fresh reinterpretation of the global spread of modern leisure travel in the middle of the nineteenth century through a critical comparative reading of twenty-two works of popular travel writing from maritime Southeast Asia and Ceylon. The examination of these books reveals a coherent genre that was seemingly frivolous yet in fact intensely political, with shared rules and tropes that served to legitimise colonial rule and codify aspects of colonial culture in the popular metropolitan imagination. On the ground in Asia, the emergent practices and preferences of this new proto-tourism reinforced and played off contemporary processes of colonisation. The analysis employs a novel transimperial framework, analysing Dutch and British travellers and their journeys in the Dutch and British colonies of the region, revealing the importance of colonial proto-tourism in creating an encompassing culture of empire that traversed national and colonial boundaries.
Author

Mikko Toivanen

Mikko Toivanen is a research fellow at the Freie Universität Berlin, funded by the Finnish Academy of Science and Letters, specialising in global and colonial history. His work deals with the Dutch and British empires in nineteenth-century Southeast Asia and the global cultures of imperialism, with a current focus on developing ideas of urbanity and the changing uses of public space in colonial contexts. His wider research interests include the global circulations of colonial knowledge and the history of Nordic colonial entanglements.