This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-Irish traveler Katherine Wilmot (1773–1824). A later version of Wilmot’s epistolary travelogue of 1801–03 has been valued as an artifact of British experience abroad during the Peace of Amiens for its descriptions of Napoleonic Paris. Yet the newly discovered draft reveals a deeper assimilation within and sympathy towards the radical political and literary networks Wilmot documented, as well as a budding relationship with author and salonnière Helen Maria Williams that is occluded from the later narrative. This article examines the complex choices surrounding authorship for British women abroad in the period by considering a refused invitatio...
This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by e...
Although virtually unknown in literary studies today, Martha Wilmot\u27s The Russian Journals remain...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
In July 2016, I traveled to Dublin, Ireland to examine the works of Martha Wilmot (1775-1873) in the...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
Before 1780, only ten books of travel by women had been published in Britain and Ireland, all by sin...
This dissertation is about six British women writers who kept accounts of the French Revolution and ...
This essay uses Anglo-Irish writer Catherine Wilmot\u27s travel journal An Irish Peer on the Contine...
Launched online in 2014, the Women’s Travel Writing database provides full and accurate bibliographi...
Between the late seventeenth and the early nineteenth century, the possibilities for travelling with...
This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by e...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...
This book chapter explores the relevance of travel literature for understanding Jane Austen's posthu...
This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by e...
Although virtually unknown in literary studies today, Martha Wilmot\u27s The Russian Journals remain...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
In July 2016, I traveled to Dublin, Ireland to examine the works of Martha Wilmot (1775-1873) in the...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
Before 1780, only ten books of travel by women had been published in Britain and Ireland, all by sin...
This dissertation is about six British women writers who kept accounts of the French Revolution and ...
This essay uses Anglo-Irish writer Catherine Wilmot\u27s travel journal An Irish Peer on the Contine...
Launched online in 2014, the Women’s Travel Writing database provides full and accurate bibliographi...
Between the late seventeenth and the early nineteenth century, the possibilities for travelling with...
This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by e...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...
This book chapter explores the relevance of travel literature for understanding Jane Austen's posthu...
This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by e...
Although virtually unknown in literary studies today, Martha Wilmot\u27s The Russian Journals remain...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...