Other Routes: 1500 Years of African and Asian Travel Writing - Tabish Khair - Books - Indiana University Press - 9780253218216 - January 30, 2006
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Other Routes: 1500 Years of African and Asian Travel Writing

Tabish Khair

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Other Routes: 1500 Years of African and Asian Travel Writing

1290), "A Korean Official's Account of China" (1488), "The Poetry of Basho's Road" (1689), "Malabari: A Love-Hate Affair with the British" (1890).


Commendation Quotes:"Hoping to mitigate the almost total erasure of non -- European travel accounts that results in a Eurocentric view of the globe, Khair (Univ. of Aarhus, Denmark) and his fellow editors showcase travel writing by international travelers of Asian and African origin. The editors offer 33 carefully excerpted travel accounts that range chronologically from the 5th century CE (Three Chinese Scholars Go 'West' to India) to the late 19th century (Malabari: A Love -- Hate Affair with the British). They organize these writings under broad categories: pilgrimages, studies, autobiographies, diaries, and memoirs, and travel accounts. Although many of these extracts will be well known to scholars of travel literature -- e.g., the writings of Olaudah Equiano, Sake Dean Mahomed, Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Battuta, and Matsuo Basho -- numerous others are relatively unknown in the West and appear in some cases for the first time in English. The volume includes a literary foreword by Amitav Ghosh and a lucid and scholarly introduction by Khair. Each of these highly readable travel accounts is preceded by an informative editorial overview that looks at the traveler, the land through which the traveler journeys, and the purpose of travel (commerce, enlightenment, conversion, etc.). Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower -- division undergraduates through faculty. -- Choice, Nov. 2006" -- M. W. Cox, University of PittsburghTable of Contents: General Introduction by Tabish KhairNote on the Process of Editing1. The 5,000 year old Poetry of Travel: The Epic of Gilgamesh, Kalidasa's Meghadutam and Tang Poetry.2. Three Chinese Scholars go 'West' to India (5th - 7th century)3. The Travels of a Japanese Mond (c. 838)4. A Merchant of Baghdad Reports on a Viking Funeral, A. D. 9225. The Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon (c. 990)6. Alberuni's Defence of Hindu India (1030 AD)7. The Horizons of al-Idrisi in the 11th Century8. The Haj and Other Journeys of Ibn Jubayr (b. 1145)9. Two Chinese Accounts of the Early Mongols (1221 and 1237)10. The Pilgrimages of Lady Nijo (b. 1271)11. The Memoirs of a Syrian Prince-Polymath (b. 1273)12. Al-Abdari, the Disgruntled Traveller (c. 1290)13. Zhou Daguan: Notes on Angkor Wat and Cambodia (1297)14. Ibn Battutah, World Traveller (b. 1304)15. Navigating with ibn Majid (floreat 1460)16. A Korean Official's Account of China (1488)17. The Travel Memoirs of Babur (b. 1482)18. Piri Reis: The Voyages of a 'Corsair' (c. 1526)19. The Ambivalences of Leo Africanus (1526)20. The European Diaries of Uruch Beg (b. 1560)21. The Travel Diaries of Xu Xiake (1623)22. An Arab Cleric in South America (1668-83)23. The Poetry of Basho's Road (1689)24. Mirza I'tesamuddin's Wonders of Vilayet (1765)25. Equiano's Voyage to Slavery and Freedom (1789)26. Dean Mahomed Writes from the Centre (c. 1793)27. African Muslim Slave Narratives of teh 19th Century28. An Indian Aristocrat in Africa and Europe (1803)29. The Diary of Queen Emma of Hawaii (b. 1836)30. Al Amraoui: Moroccan Ambassador to Europe (1860)31. Blyden: A Pan-Africanist's Voyage to Palestine (1873)32. The Shah of Iran in European Corridors (1873)33. An African-Arab Princess in Europe (1881)34. Malabari: A Love-Hate Affair with the British (1890) BibliographyReview Quotes: Hoping to mitigate the almost total erasure of non--European travel accounts that results in a Eurocentric view of the globe, Khair (Univ. of Aarhus, Denmark) and his fellow editors showcase travel writing by international travelers of Asian and African origin. The editors offer 33 carefully excerpted travel accounts that range chronologically from the 5th century CE (Three Chinese Scholars Go 'West' to India) to the late 19th century (Malabari: A Love--Hate Affair with the British). They organize these writings under broad categories: pilgrimages, studies, autobiographies, diaries, and memoirs, and travel accounts. Although many of these extracts will be well known to scholars of travel literature--e.g., the writings of Olaudah Equiano, Sake Dean Mahomed, Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Battuta, and Matsuo Basho--numerous others are relatively unknown in the West and appear in some cases for the first time in English. The volume includes a literary foreword by Amitav Ghosh and a lucid and scholarly introduction by Khair. Each of these highly readable travel accounts is preceded by an informative editorial overview that looks at the traveler, the land through which the traveler journeys, and the purpose of travel (commerce, enlightenment, conversion, etc.). Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower--division undergraduates through faculty. --Choice, Nov. 2006--M. W. Cox, University of PittsburghBiographical Note: Tabish Khair teaches at the University of Aarhus, Denmark. Justin D. Edwards is an associate professor at Copenhagen University, Denmark. Martin Leer is an associate professor at Copenhagen University, Denmark. Hanna Ziadeh is a Lebanese writer and translator who lives in Denmark. Review Quotes:"The editors offer 33 carefully excerpted travel accounts that range chronologically from the 5th century CE... to the late 19th century.... The volume includes a literary foreword by Amitav Ghosh and a lucid and scholarly introduction by Khair. Each of these highly readable travel accounts is preceded by an informative editorial overview that looks at the traveler, the land through which the traveler journeys, and the purpose of travel (commerce, enlightenment, conversion, etc.).... Highly recommended." Choice"Review Quotes:"Hoping to mitigate the almost total erasure of non European travel accounts that results in a Eurocentric view of the globe, Khair (Univ. of Aarhus, Denmark) and his fellow editors showcase travel writing by international travelers of Asian and African origin. The editors offer 33 carefully excerpted travel accounts that range chronologically from the 5th century CE (Three Chinese Scholars Go 'West' to India) to the late 19th century (Malabari: A Love Hate Affair with the British). They organize these writings under broad categories: pilgrimages, studies, autobiographies, diaries, and memoirs, and travel accounts. Although many of these extracts will be well known to scholars of travel literature e.g., the writings of Olaudah Equiano, Sake Dean Mahomed, Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Battuta, and Matsuo Basho numerous others are relatively unknown in the West and appear in some cases for the first time in English. The volume includes a literary foreword by Amitav Ghosh and a lucid and scholarly introduction by Khair. Each of these highly readable travel accounts is preceded by an informative editorial overview that looks at the traveler, the land through which the traveler journeys, and the purpose of travel (commerce, enlightenment, conversion, etc.). Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower division undergraduates through faculty. Choice, Nov. 2006" M. W. Cox, University of Pittsburgh" Review Citations:

Choice 11/01/2006 pg. 478 (EAN 9780253218216, Paperback)

Choice 11/01/2006 pg. 478 (EAN 9780253346933, Hardcover)

Contributor Bio:  Khair, Tabish Tabish Khair is an award-winning poet, journalist, critic, educator and novelist. A citizen of India, he lives in Denmark and teaches literature at Aarhus University. Contributor Bio:  Edwards, Justin D Justin D. Edwards is an associate professor in the Department of English at K?benhavns Universitet. Contributor Bio:  Ghosh, Amitav Amitav Ghosh was born in Calcutta in 1956 and raised and educated in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Iran, Egypt, India, and the United Kingdom, where he received his Ph. D. in social anthropology from Oxford. Acclaimed for fiction, travel writing, and journalism, his books include The Circle of Reason, The Shadow Lines, In an Antique Land, and Dancing in Cambodia. His previous novel, The Glass Palace, was an international bestseller that sold more than a half-million copies in Britain. Recently published there, The Hungry Tide has been sold for translation in twelve foreign countries and is also a bestseller abroad. Ghosh has won France's Prix Medici Etranger, India's prestigious Sahitya Akademi Award, the Arthur C. Clarke Award, and the Pushcart Prize. He now divides his time between Harvard University, where he is a visiting professor, and his homes in India and Brooklyn, New York.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released January 30, 2006
Original release date 2005
ISBN13 9780253218216
Publishers Indiana University Press
Genre Cultural Region > African Studies - Cultural Region > Asian Studies
Pages 400
Dimensions 133 × 203 × 23 mm   ·   476 g
Editor Edwards, Justin D
Editor Khair, Tabish
Editor Leer, Martin
Editor Ziadeh, Hanna

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