Escaping Kakania

Eastern European Travels in Colonial Southeast Asia
Editor: 
ISBN: 
978-963-386-665-8
cloth
$100.00 / €95.00 / £81.00
Publication date: 
2024
374 pages
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Escaping Kakania is about fascinating characters—soldiers, doctors, scientists, writers, painters—who traveled from their eastern European homelands to colonial Southeast Asia. Their stories are told by experts on different countries in the two regions, who bring diverse approaches into a conversation that crosses disciplinary and national borders.

The 14 chapters deal with the diverse encounters of eastern Europeans with the many faces of colonial southeast Asia. Some essays directly engage with post-colonial studies, contributing to an ongoing critical re-evaluation of eastern European “semi-peripheral” (non-)involvement in colonialism. Other chapters disclose a range of perspectives and narratives that illuminate the plurality of the travelers’ positions while reflecting on the specificity of the eastern European experience.

The travellers moved—as do the chapter authors—between two regions that are off-centre, in-between, shiftingly “Eastern,” and disorientingly heterogeneous, thus complicating colonial and postcolonial notions of “Europe,” “East,” and East-West distinctions. Both at home and overseas, they navigated among a multiplicity of peoples, “races,” and empires, Occidents and Orients, fantasies of the Self and the Other, adopting/adapting/mimicking/rejecting colonialist identities and ideologies. They saw both eastern Europe and southeast Asia in a distinctive light, as if through each other—and so will the readers of Escaping Kakania.

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Acknowledgments

Jan Mrázek, “Introductory (Dis)Orientation: A View from Singapore”

Dariusz Kołodziejczyk, “The Dutch East Indies in the Eyes of a Pole: Teodor Anzelm Dzwonkowski and his Memoirs from the Service in the Dutch Navy in the Years 1788-1793”

Jan Mrázek, “A Czech Army Doctor in Sumatra: Native Soil, Miasmatic Mud, Russian Hallucinations, All The Empires” 

Nada Savković, “The First Impressions of Singapore in Serbian Literature”

Grzegorz Moroz, “Julian Fałat in Southeast Asia: Hybridity and Mimicry in the Memoirs of a Polish/Kakanian/European Painter”

Rafal Pankowski, “Colonialism, Freedom Fighters and the Polish Ambiguity: How Józef Conrad Korzeniowski and Bronisław Piłsudski (Almost) Met in Singapore”

Iveta Nakládalová, “The Fate of the Birds of Paradise: Enrique Stanko Vráz in Southeast Asia”

Tomasz Ewertowski, “Ethnic Comparisons in Travelogues about Southeast Asia by Poles and Serbs of Austro-Hungarian Background, 1869-1914”

Marianna Lis, “The Polish Botanist Marian Raciborski and his 1901 Wayang Kulit Performance: Images and Encounters”

Gábor Pusztai, “The Identity of the Strange: The (Post)colonial Perspective in the Texts and Pictures of László Székely”

Vera Brittig, “Islands of Paradise? Java and Bali Through a Woman’s Eyes: The Journey of Ilona Zboray”

Marta Grzechnik, “Indochina’s Deadly Sun: Polish Maritime and Colonial League’s Depictions of Southeast Asia”

Jan Beránek, “Czechoslovaks in Singapore and Malaya in the Interwar Period”

Michał Lubina, “Unaware Colonialism Meets Empathy and Insightfulness: Gustaw Herling-Grudziński’s Travel Diary to Burma”

Nemanja Radonjić, “Double vision: Yugoslav Travellers and the Conflicting Images of Southeast Asia in the Era of Late Colonialism”

Contributors
Index

“Reading Escaping Kakania is like walking into a disorienting web of intertextualities, a hall of convex mirrors: there is no escape from Kakania, that imaginary empire of Eastern Europe, that early 20th century state of unsettledness, heterogeneity, and desire. A fascinating collection of essays about early modern travelers venturing from Eastern Europe to Southeast Asia, both regions long defined in terms of colonialism and authoritarianism, these essays explore how these travelers—engineers, doctors, soldiers, teachers, Czechs, Hungarians, Poles, Galicians, Serbs—had great difficulties finding place and stance in a double world, in-between, off-center, seeing home mirrored in faraway lands. Written by 21st century Eastern European scholars, the essays sympathetically look back at the experiences and adventures of predecessors; they provide reading with yet another convex mirror by writing in English, the ultimate colonial and imperial language. Escaping Kakania makes an important... more
“What do travelers from Europe's east recognize or reject in southeast Asia? Escaping Kakania is a stimulating contribution to studies of travel writing and identity issues in eastern Europe, particularly for its productive linkage of two regions that have both been defined in terms of their in-betweenness and heterogeneity, and their relationships to powerful others, above all an imagined ‘Europe.’ As well as introducing a broad array of intriguing writers and perspectives, the emphasis here on varieties of difference, and a world that is interconnected in a multiplicity of ways, makes this book an important intervention in travel writing studies in general.”