Travel Writing and the Desert

The European stereotype of the desert as a flat, sandy waste derived from images of the Sahara and the Arabian Desert, the two deserts most familiar in the West. Yet deserts are found in every continent except Europe, and this geographic spread produces an immense variation in desert locations (coas...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Haynes, R
Other Authors: Das, N, Young, T
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Cambridge University Press 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.utas.edu.au/43627/
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spelling ftunivtasmania:oai:eprints.utas.edu.au:43627 2023-05-15T13:41:50+02:00 Travel Writing and the Desert Haynes, R Das, N Young, T 2019 https://eprints.utas.edu.au/43627/ unknown Cambridge University Press Haynes, R 2019 , 'Travel Writing and the Desert', in N Das and T Young (eds.), The Cambridge History of Travel Writing , Cambridge University Press, United Kingdom, pp. 315-329. desert travel travel writing Book Section NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftunivtasmania 2022-02-21T23:18:06Z The European stereotype of the desert as a flat, sandy waste derived from images of the Sahara and the Arabian Desert, the two deserts most familiar in the West. Yet deserts are found in every continent except Europe, and this geographic spread produces an immense variation in desert locations (coastal, inland), landscapes (sandy, salt, clay pan, rocky, mountainous, glaciated), rainfall (from zero recorded in the Atacama Desert to erratic flooding in the Australian deserts), stability (deserts have appeared and disappeared over time), and climate (hot, temperate, cold and ice-bound Antarctica – the most extensive of all deserts).Irrespective of this physical diversity, the very word ‘desert’ involves powerful emotional and cultural associations. Derived from the Latin desertum, meaning ‘abandoned’, it suggests alienation and foreboding, connotations echoed in the word for desert in many languages. The numerous accounts of travellers struggling through extremes of heat or cold, facing starvation, thirst, disorientation, and loneliness, reinforce this image, while the sense of immensity, of visual emptiness, the lack of temporal references in a seemingly changeless landscape, and the characteristic silence of deserts present a further psychological challenge, raising profound questions about identity and meaning.However, these same qualities that many travellers find threatening have proved alluring for others. Precisely because of its visual desolation, its lack of material comforts and distractions, the desert may also engender a sense of the numinous, promoting inner reflection, spiritual inquiry, purification, and visionary enlightenment. Conceivably, a desert landscape beneath a vast monochromatic sky may suggest a unified cosmos, created by one deity, rather than a diversity of gods or spirits and, significantly, the three major monotheistic faiths, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, originated in the deserts of the Middle East.For these reasons, desert travel writing is rarely confined to physical description. Overtly it may seem to be concerned with destinations, details, and difficulties but, as in mountaineering, the principal narrative more often concerns an inner journey involving encounters with landscape, race, culture, religion, or the physical and mental challenges involved. The various travel writers considered in this chapter include religious pilgrims, adventurers, explorers, missionaries, scientists, and those who feel the need to undertake extreme hardship. For some the desert has explicitly religious significance; for others, its stark landscape, whether perceived as beautiful or terrifying, is a personal challenge to survive and to be the first to reach a destination; for others still, it is a place of desolation, horror, and death. In most cases these diverse reactions arise from the writers’ motives and temperament, their ability to be absorbed in their surroundings, and their psychological state. Because of their number (twenty-two major deserts) and variety,4 as well as the diversity of travellers, this essay focuses on only three desert areas: those of the Middle East, Central Asia, and Australia. Book Part Antarc* Antarctica University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints
institution Open Polar
collection University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints
op_collection_id ftunivtasmania
language unknown
topic desert
travel
travel writing
spellingShingle desert
travel
travel writing
Haynes, R
Travel Writing and the Desert
topic_facet desert
travel
travel writing
description The European stereotype of the desert as a flat, sandy waste derived from images of the Sahara and the Arabian Desert, the two deserts most familiar in the West. Yet deserts are found in every continent except Europe, and this geographic spread produces an immense variation in desert locations (coastal, inland), landscapes (sandy, salt, clay pan, rocky, mountainous, glaciated), rainfall (from zero recorded in the Atacama Desert to erratic flooding in the Australian deserts), stability (deserts have appeared and disappeared over time), and climate (hot, temperate, cold and ice-bound Antarctica – the most extensive of all deserts).Irrespective of this physical diversity, the very word ‘desert’ involves powerful emotional and cultural associations. Derived from the Latin desertum, meaning ‘abandoned’, it suggests alienation and foreboding, connotations echoed in the word for desert in many languages. The numerous accounts of travellers struggling through extremes of heat or cold, facing starvation, thirst, disorientation, and loneliness, reinforce this image, while the sense of immensity, of visual emptiness, the lack of temporal references in a seemingly changeless landscape, and the characteristic silence of deserts present a further psychological challenge, raising profound questions about identity and meaning.However, these same qualities that many travellers find threatening have proved alluring for others. Precisely because of its visual desolation, its lack of material comforts and distractions, the desert may also engender a sense of the numinous, promoting inner reflection, spiritual inquiry, purification, and visionary enlightenment. Conceivably, a desert landscape beneath a vast monochromatic sky may suggest a unified cosmos, created by one deity, rather than a diversity of gods or spirits and, significantly, the three major monotheistic faiths, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, originated in the deserts of the Middle East.For these reasons, desert travel writing is rarely confined to physical description. Overtly it may seem to be concerned with destinations, details, and difficulties but, as in mountaineering, the principal narrative more often concerns an inner journey involving encounters with landscape, race, culture, religion, or the physical and mental challenges involved. The various travel writers considered in this chapter include religious pilgrims, adventurers, explorers, missionaries, scientists, and those who feel the need to undertake extreme hardship. For some the desert has explicitly religious significance; for others, its stark landscape, whether perceived as beautiful or terrifying, is a personal challenge to survive and to be the first to reach a destination; for others still, it is a place of desolation, horror, and death. In most cases these diverse reactions arise from the writers’ motives and temperament, their ability to be absorbed in their surroundings, and their psychological state. Because of their number (twenty-two major deserts) and variety,4 as well as the diversity of travellers, this essay focuses on only three desert areas: those of the Middle East, Central Asia, and Australia.
author2 Das, N
Young, T
format Book Part
author Haynes, R
author_facet Haynes, R
author_sort Haynes, R
title Travel Writing and the Desert
title_short Travel Writing and the Desert
title_full Travel Writing and the Desert
title_fullStr Travel Writing and the Desert
title_full_unstemmed Travel Writing and the Desert
title_sort travel writing and the desert
publisher Cambridge University Press
publishDate 2019
url https://eprints.utas.edu.au/43627/
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation Haynes, R 2019 , 'Travel Writing and the Desert', in N Das and T Young (eds.), The Cambridge History of Travel Writing , Cambridge University Press, United Kingdom, pp. 315-329.
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