Jonathan Stafford
Search for other papers by Jonathan Stafford in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Introduction
Abstract only
Log-in for full text

The introduction engages the reader with the book’s main themes, contributions and methodology, and gives some historical background on the steamship route to the East. It proposes that the wealth of texts which documented the overland route voyage to India provide a distinctive perspective on the history of Britain’s imperial world, an approach which is indebted to developments in imperial history which focus on ego documents and their insight into the subjective, imaginative aspects of life in the British Empire. It argues that the steamship provided a means for both passengers, and those who read their accounts, to encounter the imaginative geographies of British imperialism. Exploring the affective engagement with the logistics of imperial mobilities contributes to the important debates regarding the relationship between metropole and periphery. Establishing the breadth and tenor of the corpus of texts drawn upon, the introduction explores the nexus between steam’s mobilities at sea, travel writing and the imaginative geographies of imperial space, drawing attention to the vicarious nature of Victorian practices of textual consumption. Furthermore, it highlights the extent to which this discourse operated through the diverse imaginative investments associated with an idiosyncratic modernity which was ascribed to the steamship. It emphasises that the preoccupation with this modernity found in the archive of imperial steamship travel is at the heart of the book’s contribution to the historiography of the British Empire.

  • Collapse
  • Expand

All of MUP's digital content including Open Access books and journals is now available on manchesterhive.

 

Imperial steam

Modernity on the sea route to India, 1837–74

Metrics

All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 311 122 8
Full Text Views 39 36 0
PDF Downloads 27 22 0