Men and women on the move : Dramas of the road
(2000) In European Journal of Cultural Studies 3(3). p.403-420- Abstract
- This article comments on three post-Second-World-War road novels: Kerouac’s On the Road(1957), Robbins’s Even Cowgirls Get the Blues(1976), Atkinson’s Highways and Dance Halls(1995). Framing its perspective within the question of what is involved in creating a 20th-century ‘traveller identity’, it conceptualizes the road in terms of how it historically and generically emerged as a primarily male territory, gendering the travel experience as a ‘male’ identity project which sociospatially constructs women as Others. Via mythologically and psychoanalytically inspired approaches to travel, it discusses the boundaries of men’s and women’s spatial movement. Juxtaposing the supposedly stationary situation of women with the performance of two... (More)
- This article comments on three post-Second-World-War road novels: Kerouac’s On the Road(1957), Robbins’s Even Cowgirls Get the Blues(1976), Atkinson’s Highways and Dance Halls(1995). Framing its perspective within the question of what is involved in creating a 20th-century ‘traveller identity’, it conceptualizes the road in terms of how it historically and generically emerged as a primarily male territory, gendering the travel experience as a ‘male’ identity project which sociospatially constructs women as Others. Via mythologically and psychoanalytically inspired approaches to travel, it discusses the boundaries of men’s and women’s spatial movement. Juxtaposing the supposedly stationary situation of women with the performance of two (fictional) women travellers it highlights the gendered politics of location and subjectivity issuing forth as men and women collide and collude in the same congested plot. To conclude, the article discusses the question whether a regendering of the representation of women on the road is at all possible in light of the genre’s heavily gendered past, and phrases its conclusions within a framework of women’s controversial mobility. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1496077
- author
- Enevold, Jessica LU
- publishing date
- 2000
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- gendering, identity politics, mobility, representations of women, road narrative, road novel, space, travel criticism, travel narrative, women travellers
- in
- European Journal of Cultural Studies
- volume
- 3
- issue
- 3
- pages
- 17 pages
- publisher
- SAGE Publications
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:84993730804
- ISSN
- 1367-5494
- DOI
- 10.1177/136754940000300307
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- 532a79b2-1463-43f1-bd3c-0db1b6bc4876 (old id 1496077)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 08:54:28
- date last changed
- 2024-01-12 07:00:29
@article{532a79b2-1463-43f1-bd3c-0db1b6bc4876, abstract = {{This article comments on three post-Second-World-War road novels: Kerouac’s On the Road(1957), Robbins’s Even Cowgirls Get the Blues(1976), Atkinson’s Highways and Dance Halls(1995). Framing its perspective within the question of what is involved in creating a 20th-century ‘traveller identity’, it conceptualizes the road in terms of how it historically and generically emerged as a primarily male territory, gendering the travel experience as a ‘male’ identity project which sociospatially constructs women as Others. Via mythologically and psychoanalytically inspired approaches to travel, it discusses the boundaries of men’s and women’s spatial movement. Juxtaposing the supposedly stationary situation of women with the performance of two (fictional) women travellers it highlights the gendered politics of location and subjectivity issuing forth as men and women collide and collude in the same congested plot. To conclude, the article discusses the question whether a regendering of the representation of women on the road is at all possible in light of the genre’s heavily gendered past, and phrases its conclusions within a framework of women’s controversial mobility.}}, author = {{Enevold, Jessica}}, issn = {{1367-5494}}, keywords = {{gendering; identity politics; mobility; representations of women; road narrative; road novel; space; travel criticism; travel narrative; women travellers}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{3}}, pages = {{403--420}}, publisher = {{SAGE Publications}}, series = {{European Journal of Cultural Studies}}, title = {{Men and women on the move : Dramas of the road}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/136754940000300307}}, doi = {{10.1177/136754940000300307}}, volume = {{3}}, year = {{2000}}, }