This thesis is an examination of the representation of people and landscapes in the adventure accounts of British professional adventurers between 1880 and 1914. It begins with the premise that adventure and accounts of it, both factual and fictional, occupied an important position in British society during this period and that adventure accounts have the potential to develop current understanding of this period of imperial history. It is divided into three sections. The first is a biographical case study of two professional adventurers, E. F. Knight and A. H. Savage Landor. It examines their lives and careers to develop an understanding of adventure account and of the active role these individuals took in fashioning their identities. Th...
This thesis investigates the ways in which British and French imperial heroes involved in the explor...
This thesis presents a comparative research study of four novels published within two years of 1881 ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
This thesis identifies and examines representations of English heroic masculinities in imperialist a...
With increasing influence from the 1880s, men and boys could read and write romantic tales of travel...
This thesis examines imperial rhetoric in published accounts of travel in Australia during the perio...
This thesis examines the representation of the settler societies of the British Empire during the la...
Some late nineteenth-century exponents of the 'Novel of Adventure', or imperial adventure-romance, r...
The essay aims at establishing the nature of the relationship between the development of the 19th ce...
Britain in the 18th century was more deeply involved with the world beyond its shores than ever befo...
Historically, the genre of adventure fiction most readily recalls books for boys and male heroes rat...
This thesis is concerned with the travel writings of three Victorian travellers to the Middle East, ...
Collection of essays covering the narration of travel through texts, images and objects. Interrogat...
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
This thesis examines representations of exotic animals in Victorian and Edwardian adventure fiction ...
This thesis investigates the ways in which British and French imperial heroes involved in the explor...
This thesis presents a comparative research study of four novels published within two years of 1881 ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
This thesis identifies and examines representations of English heroic masculinities in imperialist a...
With increasing influence from the 1880s, men and boys could read and write romantic tales of travel...
This thesis examines imperial rhetoric in published accounts of travel in Australia during the perio...
This thesis examines the representation of the settler societies of the British Empire during the la...
Some late nineteenth-century exponents of the 'Novel of Adventure', or imperial adventure-romance, r...
The essay aims at establishing the nature of the relationship between the development of the 19th ce...
Britain in the 18th century was more deeply involved with the world beyond its shores than ever befo...
Historically, the genre of adventure fiction most readily recalls books for boys and male heroes rat...
This thesis is concerned with the travel writings of three Victorian travellers to the Middle East, ...
Collection of essays covering the narration of travel through texts, images and objects. Interrogat...
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
This thesis examines representations of exotic animals in Victorian and Edwardian adventure fiction ...
This thesis investigates the ways in which British and French imperial heroes involved in the explor...
This thesis presents a comparative research study of four novels published within two years of 1881 ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...