Travel Writing and Empire: A Reading of William Hodges’s Travels in India

The history of English travel narratives reveals that its origin and development is closely linked to the British encounter with the colonial ‘other.’ In the ‘golden age’ of European navigation and discovery travel narratives emerged in England in an effort to familiarise the unknown and the strange...

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Main Authors: Md Monirul Islam, Subhajit Das
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sarat Centenary College 2017-07-01
Series:PostScriptum: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Literary Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://postscriptum.co.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/pS2.iiMonirul.pdf
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spelling doaj-6306fd530fcd416ba126577566ea8d5a2020-11-25T00:44:41ZengSarat Centenary CollegePostScriptum: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Literary Studies2456-75072017-07-012ii11510.5281/zenodo.1318871Travel Writing and Empire: A Reading of William Hodges’s Travels in IndiaMd Monirul Islam0Subhajit Das1Acharya Jagadish Chandra Bose College, KolkataPresidency UniversityThe history of English travel narratives reveals that its origin and development is closely linked to the British encounter with the colonial ‘other.’ In the ‘golden age’ of European navigation and discovery travel narratives emerged in England in an effort to familiarise the unknown and the strange. Once the initial mapping was done by the navigators, travellers, artists and explorers went to the newly discovered territories and narrated the natural as well as the ethnographic conditions they observed there. Such travel narratives undoubtedly had a role in advancing the colonial and the imperial agenda, though simultaneously, they influenced the growth of modern form of tourism during the late eighteenth and the nineteenth century. William Hodges was the first European landscape painter to visit India. During his stay in India (1780-85) he travelled extensively and made several sketches for his paintings, forty eight of which were completed and published between 1785 and 1788 as Select Views of India. A few years later he wrote Travels in India, During the Years 1780, 1781, 1782, & 1783 (1793). The present article aims to explore how Hodges exceeds his artistic self and becomes an apologist for the emerging British Empire in India.http://postscriptum.co.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/pS2.iiMonirul.pdfMughalsEmpiretravel narrativeruins
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Md Monirul Islam
Subhajit Das
spellingShingle Md Monirul Islam
Subhajit Das
Travel Writing and Empire: A Reading of William Hodges’s Travels in India
PostScriptum: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Literary Studies
Mughals
Empire
travel narrative
ruins
author_facet Md Monirul Islam
Subhajit Das
author_sort Md Monirul Islam
title Travel Writing and Empire: A Reading of William Hodges’s Travels in India
title_short Travel Writing and Empire: A Reading of William Hodges’s Travels in India
title_full Travel Writing and Empire: A Reading of William Hodges’s Travels in India
title_fullStr Travel Writing and Empire: A Reading of William Hodges’s Travels in India
title_full_unstemmed Travel Writing and Empire: A Reading of William Hodges’s Travels in India
title_sort travel writing and empire: a reading of william hodges’s travels in india
publisher Sarat Centenary College
series PostScriptum: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Literary Studies
issn 2456-7507
publishDate 2017-07-01
description The history of English travel narratives reveals that its origin and development is closely linked to the British encounter with the colonial ‘other.’ In the ‘golden age’ of European navigation and discovery travel narratives emerged in England in an effort to familiarise the unknown and the strange. Once the initial mapping was done by the navigators, travellers, artists and explorers went to the newly discovered territories and narrated the natural as well as the ethnographic conditions they observed there. Such travel narratives undoubtedly had a role in advancing the colonial and the imperial agenda, though simultaneously, they influenced the growth of modern form of tourism during the late eighteenth and the nineteenth century. William Hodges was the first European landscape painter to visit India. During his stay in India (1780-85) he travelled extensively and made several sketches for his paintings, forty eight of which were completed and published between 1785 and 1788 as Select Views of India. A few years later he wrote Travels in India, During the Years 1780, 1781, 1782, & 1783 (1793). The present article aims to explore how Hodges exceeds his artistic self and becomes an apologist for the emerging British Empire in India.
topic Mughals
Empire
travel narrative
ruins
url http://postscriptum.co.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/pS2.iiMonirul.pdf
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