Edith Wharton was an indefatigable traveller who was drawn to Europe’s landscapes and cultural heritage. Her footsteps across France and Italy have been carefully traced by her biographers and critics. The fact, however, that the writer’s infatuation with Europe also encompassed Spain has been largely overlooked in Wharton criticism. This article draws together published and archival materials, such as her unpublished letters about Spain, the Spain Diary and the typescript A Motor-Flight through Spain, to shed new light on Wharton’s complex engagement with this country and on the writing she produced in the wake of her Spanish journeys. Besides uncovering the influence that the Hispanist Royall Tyler had on her interest for this corner of E...
Through several travel books written during the reign of Elizabeth II, this article analyzes how Spa...
Known internationally for novels such as The House of Mirth (1905) and The Age of Innocence (1921), ...
Neglected during decades, Edith Wharton�s literary production on the First World War has finally rec...
Hailed for her remarkable social and psychological insights into the Gilded Age lives of privileged ...
This essay discusses and compares Edith Wharton's and Mary Roberts Rinehart's travelogues from the F...
This article offers a discussion of two books by British women which describe travels in Spain durin...
La croisière d’Edith Wharton en Méditerranée (1888) : un avènement à soi ? — Jeune mariée, Edith Wha...
This article offers a discussion of two books by British women which describe travels in Spain duri...
The themes of Edith Wharton' s short stories confirm what can be detected through her biography : th...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Spain was the destination of many foreign travellers. Howe...
During her lifetime, Edith Wharton was one of America's most popular and prolific writers, publishin...
Despite being fluent in French from an early age and choosing to live the last three decades of her ...
During her lifetime, Edith Wharton was one of America’s most popular and prolific writers. She was a...
Edith Wharton herself is an icon of the American mind in both her outward appearance as a 19th and 2...
Edith Wharton is an American icon who left behind a great legacy of literary works, including The Ho...
Through several travel books written during the reign of Elizabeth II, this article analyzes how Spa...
Known internationally for novels such as The House of Mirth (1905) and The Age of Innocence (1921), ...
Neglected during decades, Edith Wharton�s literary production on the First World War has finally rec...
Hailed for her remarkable social and psychological insights into the Gilded Age lives of privileged ...
This essay discusses and compares Edith Wharton's and Mary Roberts Rinehart's travelogues from the F...
This article offers a discussion of two books by British women which describe travels in Spain durin...
La croisière d’Edith Wharton en Méditerranée (1888) : un avènement à soi ? — Jeune mariée, Edith Wha...
This article offers a discussion of two books by British women which describe travels in Spain duri...
The themes of Edith Wharton' s short stories confirm what can be detected through her biography : th...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Spain was the destination of many foreign travellers. Howe...
During her lifetime, Edith Wharton was one of America's most popular and prolific writers, publishin...
Despite being fluent in French from an early age and choosing to live the last three decades of her ...
During her lifetime, Edith Wharton was one of America’s most popular and prolific writers. She was a...
Edith Wharton herself is an icon of the American mind in both her outward appearance as a 19th and 2...
Edith Wharton is an American icon who left behind a great legacy of literary works, including The Ho...
Through several travel books written during the reign of Elizabeth II, this article analyzes how Spa...
Known internationally for novels such as The House of Mirth (1905) and The Age of Innocence (1921), ...
Neglected during decades, Edith Wharton�s literary production on the First World War has finally rec...