Order from our website and receive 20% off books not already on sale.

Victorian Travelers and the Opening of China 1842-1907 — (1999)

By Susan Shoenbauer Thurin

A historical look at the bases for cultural stereotypes

Three men and three women: a plant collector, a merchant and his novelist wife, a military officer, and two famous women travelers went to China between the Opium War and the formal end of the opium trade, 1842-1907. Their range of perspectives, their acquaintance with one another and their similar scope of travel to Hong Kong, the treaty ports, and Sichuan lend intensity to their picture of China and the Western presence there.

What the travelers record reveals is a continuity in the response of the West and China to each other. Susan Schoenbauer Thurin's study of these writings presents a rich tapestry of impressions, biases, and cultural perspectives that inform our own understanding of the Victorians and their views of the world outside their own.

The strange mix of opium and missionaries, the aura of fabled "Cathay" and its valuable trade items, the attraction and repulsion of the exotic otherness the travelers experience, reflect the political, religious, and racial views of their era, and explain the allure of the Orient that, in part, characterized their age. Victorian Travelers and the Opening of China, 1842-1907 is a remarkable look into the cultural past.


Susan Schoenbauer Thurin, a professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Stout, is the author of many articles on Victorian literature. She has also taught in Liberia, England, Sweden, and China.

Cover of Victorian Travelers and the Opening of China 1842-1907

Order on-line or call
1-800-621-2736.

$44.95 – hardcover
$35.96 (20% off)
ISBN 13: 978-0-8214-1268-8

304 pages
photos, line drawings, map, notes, bibliography, index


Reviews

Related Subjects

Share It, Find It, Use It

Related Titles



Book Sale; red button

login