This article discusses changes that Mary Kingsley made to her 1897 Travels in West Africa when she abridged the text for a general audience
The author asserts in this thesis that the ideals of the patriarchal colonial power continue to effe...
Conference abstracts / programmes from 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016. See my brief introduction to three of...
The present article focuses on the discursive translation of colonial knowledge as a set of complex ...
Much of the scholarship regarding Mary Kingsley and Mary Gaunt has argued that these two women, in t...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
Travel writing is obviously of great interest for the study of memory. Not only do the accounts of t...
How do places shape and interact with subjectivity? By exploring how a change of location had impli...
Mary Kingsley’s Travels in West Africa, first published in 1887, is a book constructed out of memori...
Victorian women are not necessarily known for their extravagant lifestyles outside the home and ward...
Sara Mills’ influential Foucauldian study of women’s travel writing, Discourses of Difference (1991)...
Recent studies in women’s travel writing have focused on domesticity—a woman writer’s access and awa...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
Travel writing is an ever-growing area of interest in eighteenth-century studies, but it can be diff...
David Livingstone, the nineteenth-century missionary explorer, became the posthumous subject of what...
AbstractIn her travelogue-memoir, Land Below the Wind (1939), Agnes Keith - the American wife of Bri...
The author asserts in this thesis that the ideals of the patriarchal colonial power continue to effe...
Conference abstracts / programmes from 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016. See my brief introduction to three of...
The present article focuses on the discursive translation of colonial knowledge as a set of complex ...
Much of the scholarship regarding Mary Kingsley and Mary Gaunt has argued that these two women, in t...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
Travel writing is obviously of great interest for the study of memory. Not only do the accounts of t...
How do places shape and interact with subjectivity? By exploring how a change of location had impli...
Mary Kingsley’s Travels in West Africa, first published in 1887, is a book constructed out of memori...
Victorian women are not necessarily known for their extravagant lifestyles outside the home and ward...
Sara Mills’ influential Foucauldian study of women’s travel writing, Discourses of Difference (1991)...
Recent studies in women’s travel writing have focused on domesticity—a woman writer’s access and awa...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
Travel writing is an ever-growing area of interest in eighteenth-century studies, but it can be diff...
David Livingstone, the nineteenth-century missionary explorer, became the posthumous subject of what...
AbstractIn her travelogue-memoir, Land Below the Wind (1939), Agnes Keith - the American wife of Bri...
The author asserts in this thesis that the ideals of the patriarchal colonial power continue to effe...
Conference abstracts / programmes from 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016. See my brief introduction to three of...
The present article focuses on the discursive translation of colonial knowledge as a set of complex ...