posted on 2010-11-08, 09:45authored byCheryl McEwan
This thesis brings together two important developments in contemporary
geography; firstly, the recognition of the need to write critical histories of
geographical thought and, particularly, the relationship between modern geography
and European imperialism, and secondly, the attempt by feminist geographers to
countervail the absence of women in these histories. Drawing on recent innovative
attempts by geographers to construct alternative, contextual perspectives in
(re)writing histories of geographical thought, the thesis analyzes the travel
narratives of British women travellers in West Africa between 1840 and 1915.
Recent attempts by feminists to include women in histories of geography and
imperialism have, all too often, failed to analyze critically the role of women in
imperial culture, or have reproduced gender dichotomies in their analysis. This
thesis seeks to overcome these problems in three ways. Firstly, it explores the
contributions of women travellers to imperial culture, primarily through their
production of popular geographies. Secondly, it analyzes the ways in which these
women were empowered in the imperial context by virtue of both race and class.
Thirdly, it frames the accounts of each woman within the specific spatial and
temporal context of their journeys in order to explore the complexities in the
popular geographies they produced. The thesis illustrates that while gender was an
important factor in the construction of images in the travel narratives of Victorian
women travellers, this cannot be divorced from the wider context of their journey,
nor from other elements in power relations based on difference such as race and
class. Using this framework, the study explores in detail the production of popular
geographies of the landscapes and peoples of West Africa by British women
travellers, and formulates an argument on how women and their experiences can
be included in histories of geographical thought.