Travel
gave fresh impetus to the writer the ‘illusory option’ of flight from their
wearied present. As such, the traveler doubled up as a writer and an adventurer
seeking the exotic or the wild, as an exemplar of the exotic, a connoisseur of fascinating
landscapes, and an observer of strange habits, rituals and customs.
Hence,
it goes without saying that, a successful travelogue carries with it, a great sense
of curiosity and a sharp sense of humour – which were both part of the travel
writer’s narrative strategies.
However,
there is also the charge levelled against travel writers, particularly from the West,
that they were much biased in their portrayals, depictions, and representations
of the ‘Other’ or the East.
In
this regard, studies in Postcolonial Travel Writing takes cudgels against such
representations, and seeks to vehemently challenge such distorted prevailing
representations of travel writing that emanates from the West as biased,
lacking in truth value, and Eurocentric in its tastes.
Again, Debbie Lisle, in her recently
published book titled, The Global
Politics of Contemporary Travel Writing problematises or rather politicizes
the authenticity of the bestselling travel books, such as those by Paul Theroux,
Bill Bryson, Bruce Chatwin and Michael Palin, by telling her reader that, there’s
more to it than meets the eye! To Debbie, there IS a lot of identity-politics,
geopolitics and cultural politics at play in contemporary travel writing!
Therefore, despite the powers of globalization and multiculturalism on the one
side, common stereotypes about ‘foreignness’ continue to shape the experience
of modern travel.
In addition, Mary Louise Pratt deems such
coordinates of these travel texts of Euroimperialism as, “Redundant,
Discontinous, and Unreal!”
Well, this is meat for another whole
series altogether.
To sum it up, the reader should bear in
mind that, Travel Writing per se, is not an objective rendering of explorations
or journeys that happen across countries, climes, peoples and places!
undertaken. They are bound to contain preconceptions that affect representation
to a great extent. Moreover, travelogues are heavily impacted and influenced by
the narrator’s gender, race, caste, age, cultural standing and educational
levels too. Hence, all travel writing is to a considerable degree ideological.
Now for a continuation on the slew of travelogues –
The Crossing
(1994), is a novel by Cormac McCarthy. In this novel, young Billy Parham
captures a wolf on his farm in New Mexico. He decides to return the wolf to
Mexico, where he thinks it has come from, and in crossing over into Mexico, his
life changes forever.
The plot of the novel takes place before
and during the Second World War and focuses on the life of the protagonist
Billy Parham, a teenage cowboy; his family; and his younger brother Boyd. The
story tells of three journeys taken from New Mexico to Mexico. Although the
novel is neither satirical nor humorous, its realistic portrayal of an often
destitute hero taking part in a series of loosely connected quests in a brutal,
corrupt world lends this book many of the qualities of a picaro.
The Pilgrimage
is a 1987 novel by Brazilian novelist Paulo Coelho. It is a recollection of
Paulo's experiences as he made his way across northern Spain on a pilgrimage to
Santiago de Compostela. The novel serves as part adventure story, part guide to
self-discovery.
The story begins in 1986, when the author
fails his initiation into the order Regnus Agnus Mundi (RAM). He is informed
that in order to get accepted into RAM, he must embark upon a spiritual journey
along the Way of St. James in search of a sword, which symbolically will mark
his acceptance into the order. The author sets off on this quest alongside
another RAM member who is known as Petrus. He learns that the objective of this
quest is to learn the simplicity of life and the nature of truth. Petrus guides
him the entire way, showing him meditation techniques and delving into
philosophy and Western mystical thought. The meditation exercises he teaches
him include the RAM Breathing Exercise, Blue Sphere Exercise, Cruelty Exercise
and many more. On this legendary road across Spain, the author learns that
sometimes the most extraordinary, can be found in the simplest of things. The
Pilgrimage has been translated to thirty eight languages all over the world.