In the 1930s, the discourse of travel furthered widely divergent
and conflicting ideologies--socialist, conservative, male
chauvinist, and feminist--and the major travel writers of the time
revealed as much in their texts. Evelyn Waugh was a declared
conservative and fascist sympathizer; George Orwell was a dedicated
socialist; Graham Greene wavered between his bourgeois instincts
and his liberal left-wing sympathies; and Rebecca West maintained
strong feminist and liberationist convictions.
Bernard Schweizer explores both the intentional political
rhetoric and the more oblique, almost unconscious subtexts of
Waugh, Orwell, Greene, and West in his groundbreaking study of
travel writing's political dimension. Radicals on the Road
demonstrates how historically and culturally conditioned forms of
anxiety were compounded by the psychological dynamics of the
uncanny, and how, in order to dispel such anxieties and to
demarcate their ideological terrains, 1930s travelers resorted to
dualistic discourses.
Yet any seemingly fixed dualism, particularly the opposition
between the political left and the right, the dichotomy between
home and abroad, or the rift between utopia and dystopia, was
undermined by the rise of totalitarianism and by an increasing
sense of global crisis--which was soon followed by political
disillusionment. Therefore, argues Schweizer, traveling during the
1930s was more than just a means to engage the burning political
questions of the day: traveling, and in turn travel writing, also
registered the travelers' growing sense of futility and
powerlessness in an especially turbulent world.
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