Available Formats
The South Seas: A Reception History from Daniel Defoe to Dorothy Lamour
By (Author) Sean Brawley
By (author) Chris Dixon
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
21st April 2015
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
The arts: general topics
Literary studies: general
700.429
Hardback
320
Width 165mm, Height 234mm, Spine 27mm
590g
The South Seas charts the idea of the South Seas in popular cultural productions of the English-speaking world, from the beginnings of the Western enterprise in the Pacific until the eve of the Pacific War. Building on the notion that the influences on the creation of a text, and the ways in which its audience receives the text, are essential for understanding the historical significance of particular productions, Sean Brawley and Chris Dixon explore the ways in which authors and producers ideas about the South Seas were haunted by others who had written on the subject, and how they in turn influenced future generations of knowledge producers. The South Seas is unique in its examination of an array of cultural texts. Along with the foundational literary texts that established and perpetuated the South Seas tradition in written form, the authors explore diverse cultural forms such as art, music, theater, film, fairs, platform speakers, surfing culture, and tourism.
The literature on representation of Pacific Island societies, their cultures, and the history of Western contacts with them is extensive. This scholarship has been produced largelybyhistorians, anthropologists, and scholars of literature and media studies in Western countries and, more recently, by islanders themselves. Brawley (modern history, politics, and international relations, Macquarie Univ., Australia) and Dixon (historical and philosophical inquiry, Univ. of Queensland, Australia)now add to that literature. The volume isvery good indeed, offering excellent scholarship and taking up a well-chosen range of work. In addition to Defoe and Lamour, the authors consider Robert Louis Stevenson, Margaret Mead, Herman Melville, theBounty, and a few less-well-covered topics. This reader always welcomes refreshing volumesespecially those of the quality of this onethat retell, and add to, stories of how English-speaking societies have encountered the Pacific Islands and how these stories have been received and shaped over time. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. * CHOICE *
The South Seas is a rich and deeply satisfying prequel to [the authors'] previous work that shifts focus from concerns of the wartime Pacific to the reception history, or rezeptionsgeschichte, of the Pacific region as a geo-imaginary construct in broadly Westernized pre-war cultures. [T]he strength of The South Seas lies in the ways in which the authors trace clearly for their readers the comprehensive history of Western cultures sustained interest and commercial consumption of the Pacific region as a discursive and profitable meta-narrative. Particularly of note is the books deft and seamless approach to the different ways in which the Pacific has been appropriated as a malleable motif across a whole platform of media, and across vastly different economic and cultural periods of history. The South Seas isessential reading for scholars working in the areas of Pacific Island Studies, cultural and historical studies, Island Studies, and literary, film, and cultural studies. The broad range of its source material, as well the liveliness and cohesion of its chapters, makes The South Seas, on top of its academic merit, a hugely enjoyable read. * International Journal of Maritime History *
[A] rich and detailed text. The South Seas would be of interest to scholars of film and visual culture as much as historians of the region. For American and Australian readers, Brawley and Dixon expose the longstanding and often under-appreciated impact of the region on the cultural imagination. For Pacific historians, the book serves as a reminder of the deep history of generalised representations of the Pacific of stereotypes and misconstructions of the sensual and the dangerous South Seas and ways in which these were powerfully disseminated to ever wider audiences through the expansion of publishing and film. As Brawley and Dixon conclude, the South Seas were and are remarkable for the consistency of ideas sustained across time, place, and the range of cultural production and these are ideas we must often grapple with in discussing the region and its history to wider audiences. * Australian Historical Studies *
Sean Brawley and Chris Dixon draw upon an astonishing array of archival sources and popular genres to track, with unprecedented textual, filmic, and musical detail and scope, those white shadows across the South Seas that moved so palpably across the commercial-settler Pacific, above all the modernizing US and Australia Rim between the wars.Such texts say more about Western desires for regeneration or fears of degeneration in these tropics of tropes than about Native Islanders or sites, but The South Seas: A Reception History from Daniel Defoe to Dorothy Lamour provides a necessary, patient, learned introduction to fantasies, stories, myths, affects, legends, back stories, and texts that still need to be unsettled from popular dominion. -- Rob Wilson, University of California at Santa Cruz
Sean Brawley and Chris Dixon bring a new vigor to explaining the peculiar blend of art, argument, artifice and authenticity that underpins the English-speaking worlds love affair with the South Seas. -- Michael Sturma, Murdoch University
Sean Brawley is professor and head of the Department of Modern History, Politics, and International Relations at Macquarie University. Chris Dixon is associate professor in the School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry at the University of Queensland.