This article explores the travel writings, illustrated with photographs, of Fanny Stevenson and Beatrice Grimshaw, two 'lady travelers' who visited the Pacific Islands at the turn of the twentieth century. Although little critical attention has been paid to their books, these texts are significant contributions to the comparatively small archive ofEuro-American women's narratives of travel and encounter in the Pacific Islands from this period. Their representations of the Islands are at once conventional and unusual, and analysis of their texts adds significantly to the literature on women's travel writing, especially as the Pacific Islands are an underrepresented area in this field. Rather than producing generalized exoticist representatio...
Ghosts of the Pacific: Imagined Masculinities in British Voyage Literature, 1697-1817 argues that Pa...
This thesis explores the Picturesque as a visual aesthetic that is often self-consciously employed i...
Making recourse to Virginia Woolf’s “Professions for Women” (1931), I have studied the manner in whi...
Over the last decade, historical research into photography in the Pacific has grown and diversified,...
From the 1880s onwards, the Pacific Islands became increasingly accessible to the average Australian...
Japanese travel-writers to southwestern Pacific Island battlefields such as Papua New Guinea and Sol...
Since the publication of Bernard Smith’s European Vision in the South Pacific in the 1960s, an immen...
In the late nineteenth century, the Union Steam Ship Company of New Zealand (USSCo.) offered a serie...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
THE COUNTER-COLONIAL TRAVEL WRITING OF FANNY PARKES AND E.M. FORSTER by Amy Lynn Snook June, 201...
Recent studies in women’s travel writing have focused on domesticity—a woman writer’s access and awa...
This thesis explores the Picturesque as a visual aesthetic that is often self-consciously employed i...
This chapter outlines the vast rise in tourist numbers on the seas coincided with the arrival of sim...
Watriama and Co (the title echoes Kipling’s Stalky and Co!) is a collection of biographical essays a...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
Ghosts of the Pacific: Imagined Masculinities in British Voyage Literature, 1697-1817 argues that Pa...
This thesis explores the Picturesque as a visual aesthetic that is often self-consciously employed i...
Making recourse to Virginia Woolf’s “Professions for Women” (1931), I have studied the manner in whi...
Over the last decade, historical research into photography in the Pacific has grown and diversified,...
From the 1880s onwards, the Pacific Islands became increasingly accessible to the average Australian...
Japanese travel-writers to southwestern Pacific Island battlefields such as Papua New Guinea and Sol...
Since the publication of Bernard Smith’s European Vision in the South Pacific in the 1960s, an immen...
In the late nineteenth century, the Union Steam Ship Company of New Zealand (USSCo.) offered a serie...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
THE COUNTER-COLONIAL TRAVEL WRITING OF FANNY PARKES AND E.M. FORSTER by Amy Lynn Snook June, 201...
Recent studies in women’s travel writing have focused on domesticity—a woman writer’s access and awa...
This thesis explores the Picturesque as a visual aesthetic that is often self-consciously employed i...
This chapter outlines the vast rise in tourist numbers on the seas coincided with the arrival of sim...
Watriama and Co (the title echoes Kipling’s Stalky and Co!) is a collection of biographical essays a...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
Ghosts of the Pacific: Imagined Masculinities in British Voyage Literature, 1697-1817 argues that Pa...
This thesis explores the Picturesque as a visual aesthetic that is often self-consciously employed i...
Making recourse to Virginia Woolf’s “Professions for Women” (1931), I have studied the manner in whi...