
- English
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About this book
This book offers a genealogy of short fiction in English set in the Pacific and written by British, American, and Australian writers. Through its analysis of texts by non-Islander authors such as Robert Louis Stevenson, Louis Becke, Jack London, W. Somerset Maugham, and James A. Michener, this book traces the rise of 'The Pacific Tale' as a popular genre. Exploring themes of masculinity and imperialism; traders, literary mapping and inter-racial relationships; plantation labour and racial taxonomies; tropical breakdown, missions and colonial illegitimacy, together with militarism, environmental destruction and the persistence of the trope of the Polynesian belle, this study highlights the role and agency of Pacific Islanders, despite the multiple fronts on which their cultures were impacted by colonial powers. It concludes with the moment when Pacific writers Albert Wendt and Epeli Hau‘ofa express that agency in their own fictions, moving beyond the tradition of the Pacific tale.
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Information
Table of contents
- Maritime Literature and Culture
- The Pacific Tale
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on the Text
- Contents
- 1. The Pacific Tale
- 2. Emptying the Imperial Romance: Robert Louis Stevensonâs The Ebb-Tide
- 3. Mapping, Mastery, and Islander Women: The Tradersâ Voice in Louis Beckeâs By Reef and Palm
- 4. Jack London in the Solomons: Race, Labour, and Melanesianism in South Sea Tales
- 5. Late-Colonial Breakdown in the Tropics: W. Somerset Maughamâs The Trembling of a Leaf
- 6. The Pacific as Polynesian Belle: James A. Michenerâs Tales of the South Pacific and Military Occupation
- 7. Beyond the Pacific Tale
- Index1