Project overview
This project examines how the Indian Ocean has been represented in literary and legal narratives. It begins with the proposal that a high period of legal theorizing began in 1497 with Vasco da Gama's voyage across the Western Indian Ocean. This and subsequent European voyages of the 16th century prompted a search for textual authorities that did not prohibit certain actions, but rather justified any activity that promoted unlimited access to lands, goods and markets - a rhetoric that was more often buoyed by reference to literature and myth than grounded in legal precedent.
Permissive rather than forbidding, this nascent international law sanctioned the sporadic oppression of African and Asian coastal peoples and piracy by State-funded adventurers - and from there moved to accommodate the strategic expansion of Dutch, then Portuguese and French colonial rule in the Indian Ocean.
From the early sixteenth to the late eighteenth century, the Ocean appeared to represent what might be described as the lawful lawlessness of early capitalism and European colonialism. However, with the decline of the Dutch East India Company in the late eighteenth century and British triumph in the wars against France, a new power moved to dominance over the Indian Ocean - one with an agenda that entailed a desire for moral authority and more complete management of the waters surrounding its dominions.
This shift from mercantilism towards the free trade capitalism of the 19th century was registered in legal and literary texts. Within these works, the Ocean as a trope of lawlessness takes on a different meaning. It now reads as a response to the difficulties of administering the Ocean world, of mastering its particular temperament. It points to anxiety about local knowledge that, while altered by the entry of Europeans, continued to traverse the Ocean beyond their apparent authority. Lawlessness comes to signify the unique locality - a worried or exuberant (depending on the writer's perspective) recognition of how the vast distances between island groups, currents and weather connect and periodically isolate diverse ways of living.
Rather than describing international law, this trope emerges to confound prominent these of globalization and promote different measures of cosmopolitanism. This might explain why creative works in English that represent the Indian Ocean have not yet been acknowledged as a group or explored as a distinct imaginative tradition.
This project aims to gather narratives from the mid-1600s (when the first fictional imaginings of Indian Ocean locales written in English were published) to the present (in which postcolonial writers are retrieving their Indian Ocean heritage). When placed together, it is remarkable how the pivotal moments of these stories often involve reflections upon the rule of law or the absence of a rule of law. At the same time, investigating how places of the Indian Ocean have been narrated in court-rooms and legislation reveals the ongoing importance of literary notions to the meaning of the Ocean within the law.
This project aims to generate a more imaginatively aware and legally useful understanding of the modern Indian Ocean. The project would generate an interdisciplinary network of scholars and other professionals with an interest in the India Ocean. But the work of this project would also be targeted inwards, at academic practice and curriculum. It is hoped that both the study of the Indian Ocean as a field within the humanities and the inter-discipline of literature and law would achieve greater prominence in the UK academic environment.
This is a unique moment in Indian Ocean studies. Following the tsunami of December 2004, there is a great will for interdisciplinary learning. A new understanding of the Ocean is currently in a fast stage of formation. This project aims to contribute to this better comprehension of the Indian Ocean.
Permissive rather than forbidding, this nascent international law sanctioned the sporadic oppression of African and Asian coastal peoples and piracy by State-funded adventurers - and from there moved to accommodate the strategic expansion of Dutch, then Portuguese and French colonial rule in the Indian Ocean.
From the early sixteenth to the late eighteenth century, the Ocean appeared to represent what might be described as the lawful lawlessness of early capitalism and European colonialism. However, with the decline of the Dutch East India Company in the late eighteenth century and British triumph in the wars against France, a new power moved to dominance over the Indian Ocean - one with an agenda that entailed a desire for moral authority and more complete management of the waters surrounding its dominions.
This shift from mercantilism towards the free trade capitalism of the 19th century was registered in legal and literary texts. Within these works, the Ocean as a trope of lawlessness takes on a different meaning. It now reads as a response to the difficulties of administering the Ocean world, of mastering its particular temperament. It points to anxiety about local knowledge that, while altered by the entry of Europeans, continued to traverse the Ocean beyond their apparent authority. Lawlessness comes to signify the unique locality - a worried or exuberant (depending on the writer's perspective) recognition of how the vast distances between island groups, currents and weather connect and periodically isolate diverse ways of living.
Rather than describing international law, this trope emerges to confound prominent these of globalization and promote different measures of cosmopolitanism. This might explain why creative works in English that represent the Indian Ocean have not yet been acknowledged as a group or explored as a distinct imaginative tradition.
This project aims to gather narratives from the mid-1600s (when the first fictional imaginings of Indian Ocean locales written in English were published) to the present (in which postcolonial writers are retrieving their Indian Ocean heritage). When placed together, it is remarkable how the pivotal moments of these stories often involve reflections upon the rule of law or the absence of a rule of law. At the same time, investigating how places of the Indian Ocean have been narrated in court-rooms and legislation reveals the ongoing importance of literary notions to the meaning of the Ocean within the law.
This project aims to generate a more imaginatively aware and legally useful understanding of the modern Indian Ocean. The project would generate an interdisciplinary network of scholars and other professionals with an interest in the India Ocean. But the work of this project would also be targeted inwards, at academic practice and curriculum. It is hoped that both the study of the Indian Ocean as a field within the humanities and the inter-discipline of literature and law would achieve greater prominence in the UK academic environment.
This is a unique moment in Indian Ocean studies. Following the tsunami of December 2004, there is a great will for interdisciplinary learning. A new understanding of the Ocean is currently in a fast stage of formation. This project aims to contribute to this better comprehension of the Indian Ocean.
Staff
Lead researchers
Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups
Research outputs
Stephanie Jones,
2015, Journal of Eastern African Studies, 9(3), 522-535
Type: article
Stephanie Jones,
2014, Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History, 15(1)
Type: article
David Glover,
2012
Type: book
Stephanie Jones,
2012, Cultural Geographies, 19(1), 71-86
Type: article