In 1945 Australian war correspondent and later novelist George Johnston undertook a journey on the Tibetan Plateau with fellow American correspondent James Burke. Johnston later wrote about this adventure in his memoir Journey Through Tomorrow (1947) as part of a wider account of his travels in Asia during the Second World War. This paper considers the Tibetan section of his narrative with a focus on the influence of English novelist James Hilton’s Lost Horizon, with its depiction of a Tibetan utopia in the form of the lamasery of Shangri-La. In doing so the paper considers Johnston’s text as an example of the challenge faced by travel writers in negotiating the territory between myth and reality in representing the ‘truth’ of their experie...
This article reviews four recently published or republished works that bear on changing Western perc...
A ficto-critical essay, this narrative of a journey also presents an argument about time, modernity ...
Although nationalism, colonial expansion, but also thorough scientific shifts are generally consider...
Since Marco Polo\u27s day, traveling to Tibet has offered certain promises to the West--whether thos...
This project analyzes a specific mode of political and cultural transformation that has been impleme...
The Tibetan literary corpus offers a wide array of (auto)biographical accounts; Tibetans have been r...
The post-Mao era witnesses a growing interest in China’s frontiers in literature and film. Since the...
This paper is about how Western travelers perceived Tibetans from 1900 until 1950. It explores the t...
Neuhaus explores the roots of the long-standing European fascination with Tibet, from the Dalai Lama...
This paper is about how Western travelers perceived Tibetans from 1900 until 1950. It explores the t...
Travel writing first evolved with Pausanius, a Greek geographer from the 2nd century AD (Pretzler). ...
This thesis presents and analyses Chinese, Tibetan, and British sources relating to the British Miss...
With the crisis in Tibet entering its third week, we continue to sweep the web in search of interest...
Lost Horizon (Hilton) is a captivating novel about a remote idyllic place called Shangri-La, located...
For a very long time, Tibetan scholarship had been much focused on mysticism, spirituality, philosop...
This article reviews four recently published or republished works that bear on changing Western perc...
A ficto-critical essay, this narrative of a journey also presents an argument about time, modernity ...
Although nationalism, colonial expansion, but also thorough scientific shifts are generally consider...
Since Marco Polo\u27s day, traveling to Tibet has offered certain promises to the West--whether thos...
This project analyzes a specific mode of political and cultural transformation that has been impleme...
The Tibetan literary corpus offers a wide array of (auto)biographical accounts; Tibetans have been r...
The post-Mao era witnesses a growing interest in China’s frontiers in literature and film. Since the...
This paper is about how Western travelers perceived Tibetans from 1900 until 1950. It explores the t...
Neuhaus explores the roots of the long-standing European fascination with Tibet, from the Dalai Lama...
This paper is about how Western travelers perceived Tibetans from 1900 until 1950. It explores the t...
Travel writing first evolved with Pausanius, a Greek geographer from the 2nd century AD (Pretzler). ...
This thesis presents and analyses Chinese, Tibetan, and British sources relating to the British Miss...
With the crisis in Tibet entering its third week, we continue to sweep the web in search of interest...
Lost Horizon (Hilton) is a captivating novel about a remote idyllic place called Shangri-La, located...
For a very long time, Tibetan scholarship had been much focused on mysticism, spirituality, philosop...
This article reviews four recently published or republished works that bear on changing Western perc...
A ficto-critical essay, this narrative of a journey also presents an argument about time, modernity ...
Although nationalism, colonial expansion, but also thorough scientific shifts are generally consider...