During the first half of the nineteenth century, travel accounts about America were one of the most popular forms of American literature. Those authored by American males are well-documented, but present-day scholars have virtually ignored the fact that American females also wrote accounts of their native land. This study compares how male and female travel writers described four dominant antebellum American concerns: religion, nature, the status of slaves and Indians, and the role of women. It seeks to establish, within the context of opportunities open to the sexes at the time, what if any role gender played in shaping travelers\u27 responses and what if any implications this has for a twentieth-century understanding of that culture. The ...
Women who wrote amid their transnational travels in the Caribbean and Mexico in the first half of th...
When it first appeared in 1767, The Female American was called a sort of second Robinson Crusoe; fu...
The technological progress of the nineteenth century made travelling across the seas and the publish...
This study explores four literary journeys written by American and British authors: Margaret Fuller'...
During the last three decades of the nineteenth century, when trans-Atlantic steamships crossings be...
Entry in The World of Antebellum America: A Daily Life Encyclopedia, edited by Alexandra Kindell. Ab...
Many contended over the formation of "the American identity" after the American Revolution. Independ...
I make a distinction between gender roles and family roles in the literature of the antebellum Unite...
The cult of true womanhood, a code of beliefs which emphasized a woman's piety, purity, submissivene...
During the nineteenth century, when Latin American nations were seeking ways to define home territor...
The purpose of this thesis is to assess whether the ideology of separate spheres should continue to ...
The article analyses generic conventions, gender constraints and authorial self-definition in two a...
The thesis is about texts of travel produced by Americans in the Victorian period. Bayard Taylor wro...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
As a self-styled \u27female Columbus\u27, E. Catherine Bates took a transcontinental journey across ...
Women who wrote amid their transnational travels in the Caribbean and Mexico in the first half of th...
When it first appeared in 1767, The Female American was called a sort of second Robinson Crusoe; fu...
The technological progress of the nineteenth century made travelling across the seas and the publish...
This study explores four literary journeys written by American and British authors: Margaret Fuller'...
During the last three decades of the nineteenth century, when trans-Atlantic steamships crossings be...
Entry in The World of Antebellum America: A Daily Life Encyclopedia, edited by Alexandra Kindell. Ab...
Many contended over the formation of "the American identity" after the American Revolution. Independ...
I make a distinction between gender roles and family roles in the literature of the antebellum Unite...
The cult of true womanhood, a code of beliefs which emphasized a woman's piety, purity, submissivene...
During the nineteenth century, when Latin American nations were seeking ways to define home territor...
The purpose of this thesis is to assess whether the ideology of separate spheres should continue to ...
The article analyses generic conventions, gender constraints and authorial self-definition in two a...
The thesis is about texts of travel produced by Americans in the Victorian period. Bayard Taylor wro...
My study of women travel writers and imperialism is informed by four inseparable concerns, namely th...
As a self-styled \u27female Columbus\u27, E. Catherine Bates took a transcontinental journey across ...
Women who wrote amid their transnational travels in the Caribbean and Mexico in the first half of th...
When it first appeared in 1767, The Female American was called a sort of second Robinson Crusoe; fu...
The technological progress of the nineteenth century made travelling across the seas and the publish...