1st Edition

Unsettled Narratives The Pacific Writings of Stevenson, Ellis, Melville and London

By David Farrier Copyright 2007
    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the nineteenth-century Pacific, the production of a text of encounter occurred in tandem with the production of a settled space; asserting settler presence through the control of the space and the context of the encounter. Indigenous resistance therefore took place through modes of representation that ‘unsettled’ the text. This book considers the work of four Western visitors to the Pacific—Robert Louis Stevenson, William Ellis, Herman Melville, and Jack London—and the consequences for the written text and the experience of cross-cultural encounter when encounter is reduced to writing. The study proposes a strong connection between settling and writing as assertions of presence, and, by engaging a metaphor of building dwellings and building texts, the study examines how each writer manipulates the process of text creation to assert a dominant presence over and against the indigenous presence, which is represented as threatening, and extra-textual.

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction: The Written Pacific

    Chapter 1

    "Talk languished on the beach": The Possibility of Reciprocity in Robert Louis Stevenson’s In the South Seas

    Chapter 2

    "These words are so changed in a native’s mouth": Contested Frames in William Ellis’s Polynesian Researches

    Chapter 3

    "Typee or Happar?": The Unsettling Narrative of Typee

    Chapter 4

    "This is the book I write": Jack London’s Strictly Limited Body

    Conclusion: Ambivalence and Authorship

    Notes

    Works Cited

    Index

    Biography

    David Farrier