Nineteenth-Century British Travelers in the New World
Editat de Christine DeVineen Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 ian 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781409427261
ISBN-10: 1409427269
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1409427269
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Christine DeVine is Mary E. Dichmann/BORSF Endowed Professor of English at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA.
Recenzii
'This book is a key contribution to the larger dialogue about literature and nationalism. While the collection works to expand the context for understanding better known figures such as Martineau, Trollope, and Dickens, it also usefully illuminates the work of lesser-known travel writers such as Basil Hall and Isabella Bird. In exploring the further reaches of nineteenth-century British travel writing, the volume invites us to read it as a history of nineteenth-century cultural nationalism.' NBOL-19 'Victorianists, Atlanticists, Americanists, and general readers will find much to appreciate here both in the strategies employed by the contributors and editor, and in the archival research and fine detail.' Wordsworth Circle 'Christine DeVine's collection is a welcome addition to the well- established but stillgrowing fields of transatlantic studies and the study of travel writing ...' Victorian Studies
Cuprins
Introduction Seeing America; I: Imagining a New World; 1: A Joy on the Precipice of Death: John Muir and Robert Louis Stevenson in California; 2: Utopian Ideals in Transatlantic Context: Frances Wright's American Vision; 3: The Failure of Dickens's Transatlantic Dream in American Notes; 4: National Adolescence and Imaginative Freedom: The Traveling Desires of Martineau and Bird; 5: “Lodestar to Isabella's Wanderings”: Bird's West and her British Audience; II: Politics and its Discontents; 6: British Travelers and the “Condition-of-America Question”: Defining America in the 1830s; 7: “Inexpressibly Engaging”: Fanny Trollope Visits Charles Bird King's Portraits of Indian Chiefs; 8: Intertextuality in Charles Dickens's American Notes and Basil Hall's Travels in North America; III: British Travelers and the “Condition-of-America Ques; 9: “Condemned of Nature”: British Travelers on the Landscape of the Antebellum American South; 10: “My dearly-beloved Americans”: Harriet Martineau's Transatlantic Abolitionism 1; 11: “Too abhorrent to Englishmen to render a representation of it … acceptable”: Slavery as Seen by British Artists Traveling in America; 12: Telling “a still more dismal story”: Cultural Role-Playing and Surrogate Narration in Kemble's Georgian Journal; 13: The Closing of an American Vision: Alien National Narrative in Henry James's The American Scene
Descriere
By creating an 'idea of America,' popular New World travel writing offered an understanding of America through British eyes, and a lens through which nineteenth-century Britain could view itself. Nineteenth-Century British Travelers in the New World demonstrates the importance of nineteenth-century New World travel writing, examining narratives by some of the popular writers of the day, as well as paintings and drawings by travelling artists.