The Accidental Traveller: Priscila Uppal’s Search for Her Fugitive Brazilian Mother

Autores

  • Albert Braz University of Alberta

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/2175-8026.2014n67p103

Resumo

 

Travel writing is often perceived as being inevitably informed by a colonial ethos, particularly since the authors of travelogues by necessity must discern differences between their homelands and the societies they describe. However, Priscila Uppal’s 2013 memoir Projection: Encounters with My Runaway Mother illustrates that accounts of journeys to other countries are not always primarily motivated by global politics but rather by family dynamics. After all, sometimes one sees a country in a given manner simply because it happens to be the birthplace of people one has come to resent, such as the mother who abandoned you as a child.

Biografia do Autor

Albert Braz, University of Alberta

Albert Braz is an Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Alberta. He specializes in Canadian literature in both its national and inter-American contexts, being especially interested in literary and cultural representations of the relations between Natives and Newcomers. He is the author of The False Traitor: Louis Riel in Canadian Culture (2003) and of Grey Owl: The Writer and the Myths (forthcoming) and the co-editor of an issue of the Canadian Review of Comparative Literature on Comparative Canadian Literature (2009) and of an issue of CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture on Indigenous Literatures (2011). E-mail: abraz@ualberta.ca

Publicado

2014-12-16