Renegotiation of Narrative Space in Robyn Davidson’s Tracks and Sara Wheeler’s Terra Incognita: Travels In Antarctica
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Abstract
This thesis is founded on the premise that the genre of travel writing has
historically been seen as a masculine genre closely bound to the ideals of mobility,
conquest, and exploration that marginalises and excludes women from participation
due to socially imposed expectations of domesticity and immobility. Thus, this
androcentric framing or a genre based on a masculine ideology generates anxiety for
women travel writers, as travel writing produced by women has often been and
continues to be sidelined in travel writing scholarship. Struggling with such anxieties
and insecurities, women travel writers have constantly been on the lookout for
strategies and unique narrative techniques to combat the established societal norms.
This study explores two late twentieth-century women travel writers and their
navigation of genre and gender expectations: Robyn Davidson's Tracks (1980) and
Sara Wheeler's Terra Incognita: Travels in Antarctica (1996). The study thus argues
that both writers through their travel narrative engage in a renegotiation of narrative
space that exhibits how gendered anxieties complicate the boundaries of the travel
writing genre. Both authors enter territories—the Australian desert and Antarctica—
traditionally constructed as masculine domains of conquest within travel writing.
Drawing on theoretical insights from Mary Gerhart, Jacques Derrida, and Judith
Butler, I analyse how Davidson and Wheeler employ personal narrative, self-
reflexivity, and genre hybridity to establish authority within a tradition emphasising
male-coded values of objectivity and detachment. This thesis thus through Tracks and
Terra Incognita, explores the complexities that female travel writers like Davidson
and Wheeler face, and reveals how their work destabilises the traditional tropes of
exploration and redefines the boundaries of the genre of travel writing.
