Description
This book explores how Polish writers in colonial West Africa positioned themselves as neither colonized or colonizers, employing their unique 'in-between' position to influence international discourse and policy on colonialism and its legacy.
About the Author
Raymond Patton is Associate Professor of History at The City University of New York, USA. His area of expertise is in 20th century global, transnational and East European History, and he is the author of Punk Crisis: The Global Punk Rock Revolution (2018).
Reviews
Ranging across more than a century of travel writing, this work provides a wonderful array of insights into the complex 'inbetween' cultural geographies of Polish writers, from identification with native populations, to collective colonial fantasies, to orientalist traditions and Eurasianism. Equally, it brings an impressive array of original thematic arguments to bear, around white fragility, the 'imperial gothic', critiques of masculine imperialism, globetrotting celebrities and socialist 'anti-colonial colonials', in order to explore the ways in which a culture, often peripheralised and subordinated within Europe, has made sense of its place in the world. A rich feast from which to consider the evolving nature of Polish writers' global perspectives and imagination. * James Mark, Professor of History, University of Exeter, UK *
Book Information
ISBN 9781350498648
Author Raymond Patton
Format Hardback
Page Count 280
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC