This paper analyses the representation of Morocco by a British female traveller during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Emily Keen's My Life Story attempts to set out the conditions in which women travelled and translated the reception of their experiences into autobiographies in their native countries, breaking down the boundaries of space and time to discover and interpret the discourse that traverses the writer's narrative. The endeavour is to show how what was imagined about the country, what was a fantastic legend about Morocco, what started as an innocent story and literary entertainment for British readers, built up to make an authoritative discourse of colonisation. My intention and method go so far as to broaden the...
text“Reading, Writing, Roaming: The student abroad in Arab women’s literature” details new developme...
The current study is intended to investigate how Morocco is represented in post-colonial travel narr...
Considering the French protectorate in Morocco as a dynamic space for women\u27s literary production...
This paper analyses the representation of Morocco by a British female traveller during the late nine...
This thesis takes the form of a collection of theoretical and fictional documents comprising a journ...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
WOMEN'S TRAVEL NARRATIVES. A CRITICAL GAZE ON COLONIALISM? iSABELLE EBERHARDT (1877-1904) - The aim ...
Introduction Travel writing, inherently intertwines geography and literature and often becomes a pra...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
South-East Europe has inspired a significant amount of British female travel literature, especially ...
Alan Lester and Elleke Boehmer have both written on imperial networks, but what happens when our cas...
Making recourse to Virginia Woolf’s “Professions for Women” (1931), I have studied the manner in whi...
The travel narratives of French women who travelled widely in Morocco during the Protectorate period...
Throughout the British Mandate for Palestine (1920-1948), British women travelled to the country as ...
text“Reading, Writing, Roaming: The student abroad in Arab women’s literature” details new developme...
The current study is intended to investigate how Morocco is represented in post-colonial travel narr...
Considering the French protectorate in Morocco as a dynamic space for women\u27s literary production...
This paper analyses the representation of Morocco by a British female traveller during the late nine...
This thesis takes the form of a collection of theoretical and fictional documents comprising a journ...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
WOMEN'S TRAVEL NARRATIVES. A CRITICAL GAZE ON COLONIALISM? iSABELLE EBERHARDT (1877-1904) - The aim ...
Introduction Travel writing, inherently intertwines geography and literature and often becomes a pra...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
South-East Europe has inspired a significant amount of British female travel literature, especially ...
Alan Lester and Elleke Boehmer have both written on imperial networks, but what happens when our cas...
Making recourse to Virginia Woolf’s “Professions for Women” (1931), I have studied the manner in whi...
The travel narratives of French women who travelled widely in Morocco during the Protectorate period...
Throughout the British Mandate for Palestine (1920-1948), British women travelled to the country as ...
text“Reading, Writing, Roaming: The student abroad in Arab women’s literature” details new developme...
The current study is intended to investigate how Morocco is represented in post-colonial travel narr...
Considering the French protectorate in Morocco as a dynamic space for women\u27s literary production...