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In Narrative Paths: African Travel in Modern Fiction and Nonfiction, Kai Mikkonen argues that early twentieth-century European travel writing, journal keeping, and fiction converged and mutually influenced each other in ways that inform current debates about the fiction–nonfiction distinction. Turning to narratives set in sub-Saharan Africa, Mikkonen identifies five main dimensions of interplay between fiction and nonfiction: the experiential frame of the journey, the redefinition of the language and objective of description, the shared cultural givens and colonial notions concerning sub-Saharan Africa, the theme of narrativisation, and the issue of virtual genres. Narrative Paths reveals the important role that travel played as a frame in these modernist fictions as well as the crucial ways that nonfiction travel narratives appropriated fictional strategies. Narrative Paths contributes to debates in narratology and rhetorical narrative theory about the fiction–nonfiction distinction. With chapters on a wide range of modernist authors—from Pierre Loti, André Gide, Michel Leiris, and Georges Simenon to Blaise Cendrars, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, Joseph Conrad, Graham Greene, Evelyn Waugh, and Isak Dinesen (Karen Blixen)—Mikkonen’s study also contributes to postcolonial approaches to these authors, examining issues of representation, narrative voice, and authority in narratives about colonial Africa.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title page, Copyright
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. List of Illustrations
  2. p. vii
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. ix-x
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  1. Introduction: Factual Places and Fictional Routes
  2. pp. 1-38
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  1. Part 1. Narrating and Describing West Africa
  1. 1. The Enchanted Arrival: Passage into West Africa in the Travel Writings of Blaise Cendrars, Andre Gide, and Graham Greene
  2. pp. 41-68
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  1. 2. The Rhetoric of the Mad African Forest in Joseph Conrad, Louis-Ferdinand Celine, and Graham Greene
  2. pp. 69-87
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  1. 3. Travel Narrative between Spatial Sequence and Open Consequence in Graham Greene's Journey Without Maps
  2. pp. 88-110
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  1. Part 2. Travel Writing and the Novel
  1. 4. The Immediacy of Reading: Andre Gide's Travel Fact and Travel Fictions
  2. pp. 113-146
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  1. 5. The Incongruous Worlds of Evelyn Waugh's Ethiopia
  2. pp. 147-182
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  1. 6. A Critique of the African Picturesque in George Simenon's Travel Reportages and Novels
  2. pp. 183-218
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  1. Part 3. Inventions of Life Narrative
  1. 7. Virtual Genres in Pierre Loti's and Joseph Conrad's African Travel Diaries and Fiction
  2. pp. 221-239
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  1. 8. Out of Europe: The African Palimpsest in Michel Leiris's L'Afrique fantome
  2. pp. 240-265
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  1. 9. Africanist Paradoxes of Storytelling in Karen Blixen's Out of Africa
  2. pp. 266-291
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  1. Conclusion: Fiction, Colonial Travel Narrative, and the Allegorist
  2. pp. 292-304
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  1. References
  2. pp. 305-316
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 317-324
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  1. Other Titles in the Series
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  1. Back Cover
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