Travel and Colonialism in 21st Century Romantic Historical Fiction
Exotic Journeys, Reparative Histories?
Hsu-Ming Teo editor Paloma Fresno-Calleja editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:16th Dec '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Romantic fiction has often involved stories of travel. In narratives of the journey towards love, "romance" often involves encounters with "exotic" places and peoples. When history is invoked in such stories, the past itself is exoticised and treated as "other" to the present to serve the purposes of romanticisation: a narrative strategy by which all manner of things – settings, characters, costumes, customs, consumables – are made to perform a luxuriant otherness that amplifies the experience of love. This volume questions the reparative function of Anglophone romantic historical fiction to ask: can plots of travel and discourses of tourism empower women while narrating stories of healing for the wounds of the past? This is the first volume to consider how romanticised and exoticised women’s historical fiction not only serves the purposes of armchair travel but may also replicate colonial discourse, unintentionally positioning readers as neocolonial, neo-Orientalist cultural voyeurs as well as voyagers.
Chapter 1 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons [Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND)] 4.0 license
“By insightfully exploring how the use of “exotic” settings as backdrops for stories of female empowerment remains entangled with the legacies of colonialism, this volume ably demonstrates the ongoing tensions between the politics of race and gender in the modern Anglophone travel romance.”
-Joseph Crawford, Associate Professor, University of Exeter, UK
“Romantic historical fiction strives to balance fact and reparative fantasy, love, and justice. Attentive to the long histories of women’s writing, travel literature, and popular fiction, these essays are the Baedeker we need to understand the genre – and its limits. Long ago and far away, meet the here and now.”
--Eric Murphy Selinger, Professor, DePaul University, USA
ISBN: 9781032801773
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 460g
207 pages