This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. It maps the bibliography and broad trajectory of women's travel writing (principally in its published rather than unpublished form) across the period 1763 to 1862, and argues that the intellectual and literary achievement embodied in this material has been consistently under-estimated in recent scholarship. This is due in part to a modern dismissal of the travel writing form, a dismissal which is anachronistic when applied to a period when travelogues could be a major vehicle for debate and the dissemination of knowledge. And it is partly due to modern misunderstandings of the protocols of intellectual and scientific activity in the specified ...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...
Gender, class, and nationality have always affected how travelers perceive the people and cultures o...
Women¿s travel writing in the twentieth century can be seen as an area of new literature which both ...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
Launched online in 2014, the Women’s Travel Writing database provides full and accurate bibliographi...
Before 1780, only ten books of travel by women had been published in Britain and Ireland, all by sin...
Before 1780, only ten books of travel by women had been published in Britain and Ireland, all by sin...
This dissertation argues that seventeenth-century women’s writing provides vital perspectives on ear...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
This chapter surveys recent approaches to travel and mobility, women's writing, and the study of tra...
Between the late seventeenth and the early nineteenth century, the possibilities for travelling with...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...
Published in the Cambridge Studies in Romanticism Collection, Ingrid Horrocks’s Women Wanderers and ...
Despite the large printing giants of John Murray and Karl Baedeker dominating the nineteenth-century...
Introduction: Texts and Theories of Travel &nb...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...
Gender, class, and nationality have always affected how travelers perceive the people and cultures o...
Women¿s travel writing in the twentieth century can be seen as an area of new literature which both ...
This article introduces a Special Issue of Women's Writing on the theme of women's travel writing. I...
Launched online in 2014, the Women’s Travel Writing database provides full and accurate bibliographi...
Before 1780, only ten books of travel by women had been published in Britain and Ireland, all by sin...
Before 1780, only ten books of travel by women had been published in Britain and Ireland, all by sin...
This dissertation argues that seventeenth-century women’s writing provides vital perspectives on ear...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
This chapter surveys recent approaches to travel and mobility, women's writing, and the study of tra...
Between the late seventeenth and the early nineteenth century, the possibilities for travelling with...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...
Published in the Cambridge Studies in Romanticism Collection, Ingrid Horrocks’s Women Wanderers and ...
Despite the large printing giants of John Murray and Karl Baedeker dominating the nineteenth-century...
Introduction: Texts and Theories of Travel &nb...
The seventeenth century is often called the first truly global era, but worldly adventures did not r...
Gender, class, and nationality have always affected how travelers perceive the people and cultures o...
Women¿s travel writing in the twentieth century can be seen as an area of new literature which both ...