Louis Rousselet’s India andits Native Princes : Travel in Central India and in the Presidencies of Bombay and Bengal (1875) and Rudyard Kipling’s From Sea to Sea; Letters of Travel (1899) : A Postcolonial Comparative study
Loading...
Date
2015
Authors
HALOUANE, Lynda
KHERRAZ, Celia
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
university Mouloud Mammeri of Tizi-Ouzou
Abstract
This research paper is a postcolonial comparative study of Louis Rousselet’s India and its
Native Princes: Travel in Central India and the presidencies of Bombay and Bengal (1875)
and Rudyard Kipling’s From Sea to Sea; Letters of Travel (1899). To achieve our work, we
have relied on Edward Said’s Orientalism (1977). We have first studied the similarities of the
two writers in their mis/representation and stereotypical description of Indians and the
denigration of their culture and religions. The two authors describe India and Indians in the
same way. Yet they differ in the celebration of their two respective Empires. After the
analysis of Rousselet’s and Kipling’s Works in the light of Said’s Orientalism, we have
reached the conclusion that the two authors are Orientalists and stand for a French and British
intervention in India. The two authors otherize Indians as well as their culture and support
imperialism as a civilizing mission.
Description
55p.;30cm.(+cd)
Keywords
Citation
Cultural and Media Studies