Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Extreme Pursuits : Travel/writing in an Age of Globalization - Graham Huggan

Extreme Pursuits

Travel/writing in an Age of Globalization

By: Graham Huggan

Hardcover | 30 December 2009

At a Glance

Hardcover


$238.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $59.69 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 10 business days

Recent figures suggest that there will be 1.6 billion arrivals at world airports by the year 2020. "Extreme Pursuits" looks at the new conditions of global travel and the unease, even paranoia, that underlies them---at the opportunities they offer for alternative identities and their oscillation between remembered and anticipated states. Graham Huggan offers a provocative account of what is happening to travel at a time characterized by extremes of social and political instability in which adrenaline-filled travelers appear correspondingly determined to take risks. It includes discussions of the links between tourism and terrorism, of contemporary modes of disaster tourism, and of the writing that derives from these; but it also confirms the existence of more responsible forms of travel/writing that demonstrate awareness of a chronically endangered world.

"Extreme Pursuits" is the first study of its kind to link travel writing explicitly with structural changes in the global tourist industry. The book makes clear that travel writing can no longer take refuge in the classic distinctions (traveler versus tourist, foreigner versus native) on which it previously depended. Such distinctions---which were dubious in the first place---no longer make sense in an increasingly globalized world. Huggan argues accordingly that the category "travel writing" must include experimental ethnography and prose fiction; that it should concern itself with other kinds of travel practices, such as those related to Holocaust deportation and migrant labor; and that it should encompass representations of travelers and "traveling cultures" that appear in popular media, especially TV and film.

Graham Huggan is Professor of Commonwealth and Postcolonial Literatures at the University of Leeds. He is the coauthor, with Patrick Holland, of "Tourists with Typewriters: Critical Reflections on Contemporary Travel Writing" (University of Michigan Press) and coauthor, with Helen Tiffin, of "Postcolonial Ecocriticism" (Routledge).

Illustration: "Shadow Wall," 2006 (c) Shaun Tan.

More in Travel Writing

A Thousand Feasts : Small Moments of Joy ... A Memoir of Sorts - Nigel Slater
The Cocktail Diaries : A Spirited Adventure - Sam Heughan

RRP $39.99

$31.75

21%
OFF
The Golden Maze : A biography of Prague - Richard Fidler

RRP $34.99

$28.75

18%
OFF
Newcastle : The Lives and Times of a City - Scott Bevan

RRP $39.99

$33.75

16%
OFF
Jupiter's Travels - Ted Simon

$30.75

From the Holy Mountain - William Dalrymple

RRP $24.99

$19.99

20%
OFF
The Old Ways : Journey on Foot - Robert Macfarlane

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
Walking Sydney : Fifteen walks with a city's writers - Belinda Castles
Storm : Chasing Nature's Wildest Weather - Hank Schyma

RRP $65.00

$59.99

The Untold Railway Stories - Monisha Rajesh

RRP $45.00

$35.75

21%
OFF
Australia's 50 Best Multi-day Walks : WOODSLANE WALKING GUIDES - Wendy Bruere