2004
Volume 8, Issue 3
  • ISSN: 2588-8277
  • E-ISSN: 2667-162X

Samenvatting

Abstract

In 1853, Charles Walter Kinloch, a judge in Bengal, British India, published an account of his trip to the island of Java in the Dutch East Indies: . This can be considered one of the first guidebooks for English tourists visiting Java. Drawing on Elleke Boehmer’s concept of colonialist discourse, I trace how the advice passed on by Kinloch to his readers relates to British imperial ambitions in the mid-nineteenth century, and to the function of literature as a means of forging and consolidating colonial power hierarchies more generally.

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