Explores the influence of Hemingway’s 1930s Esquire “Letters” on modern tourism. Maier looks at the tensions inherent between authentic travel and commercial tourism and the impact of Hemingway’s early travels as an expatriate in Europe on his travel ideology. Discusses the author’s paradoxical need for both adventure and luxury in his travel, concluding that Hemingway’s writings and Esquire’s advertising linking rugged activities to luxury items helped shape tourism marketing following World War II
Looking at a handful of critical studies of travel writing, one will notice a recurrent feature of w...
Examines Hemingway’s inclusion of facts and brand name objects in his writing to authentically groun...
Studies Hemingway’s revision of the era’s conventional travel writing genre to depict authentically ...
Places the novel within the travel literature genre, identifying influences such as Robert Forrest W...
Positions both works within the Grand Tour tradition, focusing on each author’s working-class consci...
Close rhetorical analysis of Hemingway’s 1935 Esquire essay, a humorous satire written in part in re...
Discusses Hemingway’s escape from the overly expatriated population of Paris to Spain where he sough...
Examines how Hemingway and Malraux used their well-known public personas to manipulate audiences int...
Investigates the nuances of Hemingway’s two travel books, Death in the Afternoon and Green Hills of ...
Examination of Hemingway’s early work to uncover the author’s ambivalence toward authenticity in bot...
The essay investigates the theme of tourism in Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms, focusing on the one h...
Overview of Hemingway’s life and writing, addressing his ultra-masculine persona and treatment of ge...
The book will explore the changing conceptions of travel as educational practice from the late 17th ...
In 1947, a group of twenty-two Iowa farmers traveled to Europe for a month-long trip around the cont...
In 1947, a group of twenty-two farmers from the state of Iowa traveled to Europe for a month-long tr...
Looking at a handful of critical studies of travel writing, one will notice a recurrent feature of w...
Examines Hemingway’s inclusion of facts and brand name objects in his writing to authentically groun...
Studies Hemingway’s revision of the era’s conventional travel writing genre to depict authentically ...
Places the novel within the travel literature genre, identifying influences such as Robert Forrest W...
Positions both works within the Grand Tour tradition, focusing on each author’s working-class consci...
Close rhetorical analysis of Hemingway’s 1935 Esquire essay, a humorous satire written in part in re...
Discusses Hemingway’s escape from the overly expatriated population of Paris to Spain where he sough...
Examines how Hemingway and Malraux used their well-known public personas to manipulate audiences int...
Investigates the nuances of Hemingway’s two travel books, Death in the Afternoon and Green Hills of ...
Examination of Hemingway’s early work to uncover the author’s ambivalence toward authenticity in bot...
The essay investigates the theme of tourism in Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms, focusing on the one h...
Overview of Hemingway’s life and writing, addressing his ultra-masculine persona and treatment of ge...
The book will explore the changing conceptions of travel as educational practice from the late 17th ...
In 1947, a group of twenty-two Iowa farmers traveled to Europe for a month-long trip around the cont...
In 1947, a group of twenty-two farmers from the state of Iowa traveled to Europe for a month-long tr...
Looking at a handful of critical studies of travel writing, one will notice a recurrent feature of w...
Examines Hemingway’s inclusion of facts and brand name objects in his writing to authentically groun...
Studies Hemingway’s revision of the era’s conventional travel writing genre to depict authentically ...