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Author:
Wallen, John, author.
Title:
New perspectives on Sir Richard Burton : orientalism, the Cannibal Club and Victorian ideas of sex, race and gender / John Wallen.
Publisher:
Academica Press,
Copyright Date:
2016
Description:
x, 187 pages ; 24 cm
Subject:
Burton, Richard Francis,--Sir,--1821-1890--Political and social views.
Cannibal Club (London, England)--History.
Orientalism--Great Britain--History--19th century.
Racism--Great Britain--History--19th century.
Pornography--Great Britain--History--19th century.
Men, White--Great Britain--Social conditions--19th century.
Imperialism--History--Great Britain--History--19th century.
Great Britain--History--History--19th century.
Said, Edward W.--Political and social views.
Postcolonialism--Philosophy.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Is Burton still relevant? -- Sufi, Christian or Buddhist? : Richard Francis Burton's "parameters of belief" -- The Cannibal Club and the origins of 19th century racism and pornography -- Burton, Said and postcolonial theory : an unreasonable discourse -- Burton in Makkah and Medina : Sufi aspirant or imperialist spy? -- White skin, Arab mask : polygenism and Burton's sojourn in Harar -- The gold mines of Midian and the land of Midian revisited : Burton's "imperial eyes" -- The "terminal essay" to Burton's Arabian nights : tasting the forbidden fruit -- Sexual anthropology : Burton and Said's "gendered axis" -- Burton's personas : imperialist dissimulation or parody/hybridity?
Summary:
"A research monograph on the mid-Victorian rise of Sir Richard Burton, Orientalism and the phenomenon of the Cannibal Club is overdue as, although it has been dealt with superficially many times, there has never been a book length treatment which focuses clearly on the whole arc of its historical development and its relevance to the undercutting of the standard view of the Victorians as almost exclusively prudish and deeply moralistic about sex and pornography. Furthermore, the importance of the Cannibal Club extends beyond the subject of sexuality and into the fields of race and gender. This book length treatment would gives the opportunity to examine the ways in which this secretive men's club both reflected and helped to create some extreme Victorian ideas about race, sex and gender which, although a background theme to the more acceptable moral righteousness of the period, nevertheless has reverberated with powerful emphasis, even down to the present day. The result of this has been to create an ambiguous, but overlapping, secret place where normally 'respectable' citizens might indulge their taste for extreme and elitist views in 'deviant' but socially permitted ways"--Provided by publisher.
ISBN:
1936320878
9781936320875
OCLC:
(OCoLC)861676325
LCCN:
2015030437
Locations:
USUX851 -- Iowa State University - Parks Library (Ames)

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