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In a piece on 'Travel Writing and African Writing in the 21st Century', Fatimah Kelleher writes that:'Over the last 400 years travel literature has been dominated by western colonial and post-colonial viewpoints ... that have contributed to the larger lens through which places like Africa are viewed globally'.
Kelleher goes on to write that:
'While mainstream travel writing has since become more self-aware (with less carelessly Eurocentric narratives), the genre has altered very little when it comes to greater representation within its authorship, especially where African representation is concerned.'Although travel writing by African and African Diaspora authors is not that mainstream, there are works out there which Kelleher introduces, such as Noo Saro-Wiwa' Looking for Transwonderland, Tété-Michel Kpomassie's An African in Greenland, and even Binyavanga Wainaina'sOne Day I will Write About this Place.
A Fly Girl gives insight into the highs and lows in the world of a former BA cabin crew, in an intriguing travel writing memoir. In the global landscape the memoirist meticulously documents personal adventures, social structures and political history throughout her daring and exciting expeditions. Conveying tales from the America's, Arabia, Asia to Africa the narrative is fueled with race, gender and sexuality as the author walks through hip history and experiences terrain vibrations and eruptions. The author exposes her relation to addictions, alcohol, air rage and the life of the jet set, highlighting history of British Airways at forty.
As someone who loves to travel, it is really great to know that there are books not only of Africans traveling outside of the continent, but also within. Also SOAS has this course on Travelling Africa: Writing the Cape to Cairo, which has an amazing reading list. I would take that course.