The Dictionary of Human Geography

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connected to each destination by a route with
a specified unit cost. Problems with this simple
spatial structuremay be solved very effi-
ciently, and the method is used in both public
sector (e.g. allocating pupil to schools) and
business (cheapest routing of distribution),
though many recent applications use a more
general network structure. lwh

Suggested reading
Hay (1977); Taaffe and Gauthier (1973).

travel writing A genre of prose about the
experience of being away from home. While
travel writing ineuropecan be traced back to
Homer’sOdyssey, it has rarely been considered
either seriousliteratureor credibleethnog-
raphy, and was typically excluded from the
conventional history of geography (seegeog-
raphy, history of). In the past several dec-
ades, however, the genre has been reassessed
within thehumanitiesand the social sciences,
and there has been a resurgence of critical
interest in travel writing. This can be traced
to a number of broader changes in academic
fashion. One was the rise ofpostmodernism,
which validated the study of popular forms of
culture, including writing, rather than simply
‘the Greats’. Within many of the social sci-
ences, postmodernism was closely associated
with acultural turnthat focused greater
attention on practices ofrepresentation.A
second, related source of interest in travel writ-
ing was the development ofpost-colonialism
and the key role played by literary scholar
Edward Said (1935–2003) in its articulation.
The success of Said’s (2003 [1978]) critique
of orientalism created a multidisciplinary
growth industry in the study of colonial repre-
sentations of other places and peoples. Travel
writings were seen as primary sources for the
recovery ofimaginative geographies. A third
influence wasfeminism, which showed that
nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century travel
accounts written by women were important but
marginalized sites of the production of geo-
graphical knowledge (indeed, they had been
marginalized by Said too) (cf. McEwan, 2000).
Withinhuman geography, interest in travel
writing has had a number of different foci.
Among these has been a renewed interest in
records and writings produced under the signs
ofexplorationandscience, but now read
critically astexts, using the resources of the
literary as well as the historical disciplines to
disclose the multiple ways in which thedis-
course of exploration and enumeration
worked to produce its objects of inquiry. As

the discourse of Orientalism produced ‘the
Orient’, for example, so the discourse oftro-
picalityproduced ‘the Tropics’ (Driver and
Martins, 2005). Such studies feed into an
interest in the spaces through which scientific
knowledges are produced, the channels
through which they circulate and the centres
at which they accumulate. The same spatial
thematics animate studies of travel writing
outside the nominally scientific domain
(Gregory, 2001a). In Europe, the distinction
between ‘travel’ and ‘tourism’ is an historical
one, freighted with assumptions about edifica-
tion and independence that register a series of
classdistinctions. But travellers and tourists
throughout the nineteenth and on into the
twentieth centuries had a compulsion towrite
their journeys, and the critical scrutiny of their
texts has much to tell us about not only the
production, and on occasion the disruption, of
cultural stereotypes and processes oftrans-
culturation (Pratt, 1992) – few travellers
arrived at their destination with their cultural
baggage intact and simply unpacked it to make
pre-configured sense of what they saw – but
alsoabout theformation of nationaliden-
titiesand the consolidation of bourgeoiscul-
ture(Buzard, 1993; Duncan and Gregory,
1999). Travellers did not only write diaries,
journals and letters; they also sketched,
painted, and took photographs, and the inter-
rogation of this visual archive has been of con-
siderable importance in the recovery and
analysis of cultural constructions oflandscape
in particular (Stafford, 1984; Osborne, 2000;
Schwartz and Ryan, 2003). Travel was also
historically coded through notations ofgen-
derandsexuality, and there has been a not-
able interest in the ways in which travel could
permit the realization ofdesireandtransgres-
sion that was simply impossible at home
(Aldrich, 1993; Boone, 1995; Gregory, 1995a).
This brief summary suggests a series of la-
cuna in work on travel writing that are only
now starting to be addressed. First, research
has been dominated by studies of European
and North American travellers beyond their
own shores – but what of the ‘return gaze’
(e.g. Burton, 1998)? Second, the texts under
closest scrutiny were typically produced by
those whochoseto travel under the signs of
science, culture or pleasure – but what of the
experiences of those who were obliged to
travel under other signs: commerce, capture
or duty (e.g. Colley, 2002), or as fugitives
from disaster orwar(seerefugees)? Third,
much of this work has fastened on historical
rather than contemporary writings, a focus

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_T Final Proof page 774 31.3.2009 9:40pm Compositor Name: ARaju

TRAVEL WRITING
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