1st Edition

Expedition into Empire Exploratory Journeys and the Making of the Modern World

Edited By Martin Thomas Copyright 2015
242 Pages 32 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

254 Pages 32 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

254 Pages 32 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Expeditionary journeys have shaped our world, but the expedition as a cultural form is rarely scrutinized. This book is the first major investigation of the conventions and social practices embedded in team-based exploration. In probing the politics of expedition making, this volume is itself a pioneering journey through the cultures of empire. With contributions from established and emerging... Read more

1. What Is an Expedition?: An Introduction  Martin Thomas  2. What Is an Explorer?  Adriana Craciun  3. Settler Colonial Expeditions  Lorenzo Veracini  4. The Expedition as a Cultural Form: On the Structure of Exploratory Journeys as Revealed by the Australian Explorations of Ludwig Leichhardt  Martin Thomas  5. The Theatre of Contact: Aborigines and Exploring Expeditions  Philip Jones  6. Expeditions, Encounters, and the Praxis of Seaborne Ethnography: The French Voyages of La Pérouse and Freycinet  Bronwen Douglas  7. Armchair Expeditionaries: Voyages into the French Musée de la Marine, 1828–78  Ralph Kingston  8. On Slippery Ice: Discovery, Imperium, and the Austro-Hungarian North Polar Expedition (1872-4)  Stephen A. Walsh  9. A Polar Drama: The Australasian Antarctic Expedition of 1911–14  Tom Griffiths  10. The 1928 MacRobertson Round Australia Expedition: Colonial Adventuring in the Twentieth Century  Georgine Clarsen  11. The Expedition’s Afterlives: Echoes of Empire in Travel to Asia  Agnieszka Sobocinska

Biography

Martin Thomas is Associate Professor in the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University. He is the author of The Artificial Horizon: Imagining the Blue Mountains (2003) and The Many Worlds of R. H. Mathews: In Search of an Australian Anthropologist (2011), winner of the National Biography Award of Australia.

"Expedition into Empire succeeds in encouraging scholars both to look more critically at its forms and to recognise that, quite often, the performance of expedition rarely went according to rehearsal."-Ryan T. Jones, Univeristy of Auckland

"Expedition into Empire succeeds in its aim to open a critical dialogue around the phenomenon of the expedition. This collection serves as a ‘stepping-stone’ for future scholarship by setting a course for reapproaching the historiography of crosscultural encounter, exploration, and empire-making." -Natalie Cox, University of Warwick, UK