Border crossings in the African travel narratives of Ibn Battuta, Richard Burton and Paul Theroux
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Date
2012
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
This article compares the representation of African borders in the 14th-century
travelogue of Ibn Battuta, the 19th-century travel narrative of Richard Burton and the
21st-century travel writing of Paul Theroux. It examines the mutually constitutive
relationship between conceptions of literal territorial boundaries and the figurative
boundaries of the subject that ventures across borders in Africa. The border is seen as
a liminal zone which paradoxically separates and joins spaces. Accounts of border
crossings in travel writing from different periods suggest the historicity and cultural
specificity of conceptions of geographical borders, and the way they index the �boundaries�
of the subjects who cross them. Tracing the transformations in these conceptions
of literal and metaphorical borders allows one to chart the emergence of the dominant
contemporary idea of �Africa� as the inscrutable, savage continent.
Description
Keywords
Travel narrative, Africa, Border crossings, Autobiography, Rites of passage, The self
Citation
Moolla, F.F. (2013). Border crossings in the African travel narratives of Ibn Battuta, Richard Burton and Paul Theroux. Journal of Postcolonial Writing http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17449855.2012.759128