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Traveller as historian
Travel and Ethnography allows us to see the pre-history of
imperialist discourse which was driven more by practical concerns
than an Orientalist agenda. Travel is not necessarily a prelude
to empire, says DILIP MENON.
TRAVEL is seen by postcolonial theory as a prelude to empire, and
the traveller is represented as a peculiarly jaundiced individual
whose perception is already predetermined by a European
demonology of the Orient. What is missing in these accounts is a
sense of history - that there is a change in European perceptions
of the rest of the world from the 14th to the 19th Century; a
sense of diversity - that texts by merchants, monks, ordinary
travellers and colonial officials may occupy diverse intellectual
worlds; a sense of the context in which knowledge is produced -
that travellers may reproduce local knowledges and prejudices as
much as import some of their own; and a sense that knowledge is
not necessarily cumulative - the 18th Century traveller does not
represent the apogee of prejudices honed since the 14th Century.
Rubies's book is an erudite, engaging and lucid account of travel
writing in the Renaissance, particularly with regard to South
India. Its lightly worn scholarship allows the reader to engage
with the sheer diversity of individual representation. Rubies
makes three significant arguments. First, that even early
missionary discourse could accommodate an appreciation of the
civilisation of the Orient while maintaining the possibility of
native religion being idolatrous and in need of reform. Second, a
lot of the writing on Asia which made its way to Europe was
written by laypersons with limited access to law, theology and
the emerging scholarly discourse of the superiority of European
Christian civilisation. This writing represented the practical
concerns of merchants, soldiers and crown officials who, as yet,
had no particular axe to grind. Third, there was a general
interpretive framework centred on the importance of the city,
kingship and rituals. Rubies points out that dismissal of foreign
societies on the grounds of incompatible religious ideologies was
never an impediment to the discussion of varying laws and
customs.
Following the Renaissance, a new empirical geography was
beginning to replace the earlier maps of religious pilgrimage
influenced by the imagination of the Crusades. The writings of
Marco Polo in the 13th Century represent this shift: a lay
person's individual observations. Marco Polo also wrote with the
assumption not of radical difference but with the idea that
"where there is power and law there must also be faith". Rubies
is rightly impatient with the idea that Polo was conditioned to
see Asia in terms of the marvellous and the monstrous. He shows
how Polo tried to evolve an ethnographic approach that tried to
engage with legends of unicorns and pigmies keeping their context
in mind.
Renaissance geography had begun to question the veracity of the
geographical vision of the ancient world - of Ptolemy and Strabo
- and even peripatetic merchants and soldiers were being required
to meet the critical standards of the humanists. Nicolo Conti's
account made travel the structure for geographical, economic and
ethnographic description. Following upon the urban experience of
the Renaissance, cities became the centres of geographical
analysis and the Vijayanagara kingdom begins its life within
European discourse as an embodiment of civility. Crucially, the
emerging discourse of civilisation centres more on urbanity and
kingship and is independent of Christian theology. The
Renaissance had seen the reintroduction of pagan gods within the
Christian imagination and the discussion even of idolatry in
India takes place within an analytical structure seeking
parallels with Christianity. The discussion of sati too tries to
temper the alienness of the practice by looking at it within the
framework of the dignity of choice by the widow. The idea of the
traveller as a model of "audacity, survival and self regulation"
is central. The traveller presents his account as a
"decontextualised individual" and his claim to authority is based
on personal experience - however rhetorical this claim may be.
Understanding the Portuguese presence (Portugal has not been
mentioned before. Is this book mainly about Portuguese
travellers?) in India needs a fragmented approach largely because
of the unreliability of the criminal exiles, renegades and humble
folk who made up the enterprise. Portugal was hardly a coherent
imperial power and Rubies points out that the weaker the
Europeans felt, the more they tried to understand with precision.
Vijayanagara emerges again as a sophisticated political entity
because of its strategic importance in the horse trade, the
possibility of its being an ally against Calicut; a melange of
reasons presided over by no absolute principle of perception of
"the Orient". From 1500, the Portuguese presence generated more
information and the Malabar Coast became one of the better-mapped
areas of the Renaissance world. Duarte Barbosa's account of what
he saw and heard in the Orient abounds in ethnographical
description and an attempt to decode indigenous societal rules
empirically rather than normatively. As Rubies puts it, human
culture was ranked hierarchically according to political and
economic success and for Barbosa, Vijayanagara represented a
society that could equal or surpass his own.
It is with the crisis of Catholicism following the collapse of
the Spanish and Portuguese colonies and the influence of the
Counter Reformation that a change is perceived. The spate of
critical travel accounts by missionaries from the 17th Century
takes Christianity as the standard of judgement; gentile religion
becomes nothing more than devilish superstition. European
colonial expansion would produce its own intemperate discourse
from the 18th Century. What Rubies allows us to see is the pre-
history of an imperial discourse without allowing us the lazy
comfort of a teleology which sees Renaissance travel accounts as
a prelude to the Orientalist imagination. This is a stimulating,
sophisticated and empirically rich work which needs to be read by
everyone concerned with the current Manichaeanism of academic
discourse: European discourse bad; native discourse good.
Travel and Ethnology in the Renaissance, Joan Pao Rubies,
Cambridge University Press, 2000, price not mentioned.
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