Tropicopolitans: Colonialism and Agency, 1688-1804
Srinivas Aravamudan



440 pages ( 1999)
28 b&w photographs

Cloth - $89.95
0-8223-2283-8
[ISBN13 978-0-8223-2283-2]

Paperback - $24.95
0-8223-2315-X
[ISBN13 978-0-8223-2315-0]

In Tropicopolitans Srinivas Aravamudan reconstructs the colonial imagination of the eighteenth century. By exploring representations of peoples and cultures subjected to colonial discourse, he makes a case for the agency—or the capacity to resist domination—of those oppressed. Aravamudan’s analysis of texts that accompanied European commercial and imperial expansion from the Glorious Revolution through the French Revolution reveals the development of anticolonial consciousness prior to the nineteenth century.
“Tropicalization” is the central metaphor of this analysis, a term that incorporates both the construction of various dynamic tropes by which the colonized are viewed and the site of the study, primarily the tropics. Tropicopolitans, then, are those people who bear and resist the representations of colonialist discourse. In readings that expose new relationships between literary representation and colonialism in the eighteenth century, Aravamudan considers such texts as Behn’s Oroonoko, Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe and Captain Singleton, Addison’s Cato, and Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels and The Drapier’s Letters. He extends his argument to include analyses of Johnson’s Rasselas, Beckford’s Vathek, Montagu’s travel letters, Equiano’s autobiography, Burke’s political and aesthetic writings, and Abbé de Raynal’s Histoire des deux Indes. Offering a radical approach to literary history, this study provides new mechanisms for understanding the development of anticolonial agency.
Introducing eighteenth-century studies to a postcolonial hermeneutics, Tropicopolitans will interest scholars engaged in postcolonial studies, eighteenth-century literature, and literary theory.


Tropicopolitans is the most theoretically sophisticated study yet of colonialist texts in the eighteenth century.”—James Thompson, author of Models of Value: Eighteenth-Century Political Economy and the Novel

Tropicopolitans might initiate a school of “tropicalization” studies. In the emerging field of what we have learned to name Black Atlantic writing, Aravamudan has made substantial contributions in his chapters on Equiano and Toussaint Louverture, in which each figure is richly, contextually read. The wrenching from a Euro-Christian framework into a tropicalizing one opens up these figures to new critical investigations instead of merely freezing their heroic status for all time. Aravamudan’s book should go some way toward helping us maintain our vigil against premature orthodoxies.”—Donna Landry, author of The Muses of Resistance: Laboring Class Women’s Poetry in Britain, 1739–1796

Srinivas Aravamudan is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Washington.

Winner, 2000 MLA Prize for a First Book
   Modern Language Association

  

  

  




  

   

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Related subjects:
Postcolonial Studies
Literary Studies, Criticism & Theory
Art History & Criticism




             
             
           
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