Entry
Adrian S. Wisnicki is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Faculty Fellow of the university’s Center for Digital Research in the Humanities. He holds a Ph.D. in English from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He currently directs Livingstone Online (livingstoneonline.org), a major peer-reviewed digital humanities project funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Print publications include Conspiracy, Revolution, and Terrorism from Victorian Fiction to the Modern Novel (Routledge, 2008), and articles in Victorian Studies, Studies in Travel Writing, History in Africa, Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History, and elsewhere.
"The broader insights generated by this comparative approach are
precisely what makes the book a must-read for historical
geographers working on the his-tory of travel, exploration and
empire."- Edward Armston-Sheret, Royal Holloway, London, UK,
Journal of Historical Geography"It is rare to read a work as
rigorously interdisciplinary in its methods and objectives as
Adrian Wisnicki’s Fieldwork of Empire. Making skillful use of
evidence and insights from African history (including oral
history), anthropology, cartography, historical geography, and
literature, this is a work that defies disciplinary categorization.
Although the author holds a PhD in English, teaches in an English
department, and addresses issues related to ‘expeditionary
literature’, as announced in the subtitle, he has written a book
that is relevant and revealing to scholars in a variety of
fields."- Dane Kennedy, Journal of Victorian Culture 25:3 (July
2020): 468-70"This book offers precisely the kind of dense,
complex, intercultural reading of Victorian travelers, their
journeys, and their literary and cartographic productions that
scholars of travel writing on Africa have envisioned since the boom
in such criticism began in the late 1980s and early 1990s."-- Laura
Franey, Review 19 (2020)
"Wisnicki offers a clear, capacious, meticulously researched and
supported argument that shows not only the strong impress of
European epistemologies upon the African continent, but also the
unexpected (and sometimes highly determinative) influence of
Indigenous African forces upon European mapping of and discourse
about Central Africa."- John McBratney, Victorian Studies 62:3
(Spr. 2020)"Fieldwork of Empire complements new studies of
indigenous interactions with and responses to the colonial
imposition, which are increasingly highlighting the global,
national and local agencies, participants and audiences which were
integral to the production of identities, spaces, material
cultures, archives and "knowledge" in and of Africa during the
nineteenth century. [...] Wisnicki manages to weave together an
insightful tapestry of the human influences that contributed to the
making of Victorian expeditionary literature of Africa,
illuminating the neglected, but the fundamental role of local,
non-Western individuals and populations in dynamic processes of
exchange and contestation."- Jared McDonald, Historia 64:2
(2019)"Fieldwork of Empire therefore provides powerful arguments in
favour of the need to ground new studies of Victorian exploration
in local contexts, to the extent that the relationship in the field
between British explorers and "subalterns" can be reconsidered and
general assumptions about intercultural encounters can be
challenged."- Guillaume Didier, Socie´te´ d’E´tude de la
Litte´rature de Voyage du Monde Anglophone (2019)
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