Travel Writing: Critical Concepts in Literary and Cultural Studies
Editat de Tim Youngs, Charles Forsdicken Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 noi 2012
- Michael Cronin on travel and translation
- Robyn Davidson interviewed by Tim Youngs
- Peter Hulme on Columbus
- David Espey on Americans in Vietnam
- John Hutnyk on Calcutta
- Charles Forsdick on French travel writing
- Mary Louise Pratt on travel-writing scholarship
- Richard White on Australian travellers.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780415374989
ISBN-10: 0415374987
Pagini: 1653
Dimensiuni: 178 x 259 x 145 mm
Greutate: 3.13 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Routledge
Seria Critical Concepts in Literary and Cultural Studies
ISBN-10: 0415374987
Pagini: 1653
Dimensiuni: 178 x 259 x 145 mm
Greutate: 3.13 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Routledge
Seria Critical Concepts in Literary and Cultural Studies
Cuprins
Volume I
Part 1: Writing Travel
1. Jonathan Raban, ‘The Journey and the Book’, For Love and Money: Writing, Reading, Travelling, 1969ߝ1987 (Collins Harvill, 1987), pp. 253ߝ60.
2. Ella Maillart, ‘My Philosophy of Travel’, Traveller’s Quest: Original Contributions Towards a Philosophy of Travel (William Hodge, 1950), pp. 114ߝ26.
3. Tim Youngs, ‘Interview with Robyn Davidson’, Studies in Travel Writing, March 2005, 9, 1, 21ߝ36.
4. Colin Thubron, ‘Travel Writing Today: Its Rise and Its Dilemma’, in A. N. Wilson (ed.), Essays by Diverse Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature (Boydell, 1984), pp. 167ߝ81.
Part 2: Editing and Publishing Travel
5. Daniel Carey, ‘Hakluyt’s Instructions: The Principal Navigations and Sixteenth-Century Travel Advice’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2009, 13, 2, 167ߝ85.
6. David Henige, ‘Tractable Texts: Modern Editing and the Columbian Writings’, in Germaine Warkentin (ed.), Critical Issues in Editing Exploration Texts: Papers Given at the Twenty-Eighth Annual Conference on Editorial Problems, University of Toronto, 6ߝ7 November 1992 (University of Toronto Press, 1995), pp. 1ߝ35.
7. J. C. Beaglehole, ‘Some Problems of Editing Cook’s Journals’, Historical Studies, 1957, 8, 1ߝ12.
8. Gary E. Moulton, ‘Editorial Procedures’ for The Journals of Lewis and Clark (lewisandclarkjournals.unl.edu).
9. Marie‐Noëlle Bourguet, ‘A Portable World: The Notebooks of European Travellers’, Intellectual History Review, 2010, 20, 3, 377ߝ400.
10. C. W. J. Withers and I. M. Keighren, ‘Travels into Print: Authoring, Editing and Narratives of Travel, c. 1815ߝc. 1857’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 2011, 36, 560ߝ73.
11. Charles Sugnet, ‘Vile Bodies, Vile Places: Travelling with Granta’, Transition, 1991, 51, 70ߝ85.
12. Dea Birkett and Sara Wheeler, ‘Introduction’, in Dea Birkett and Sara Wheeler (eds.), Amazonian: The Penguin Book of Women’s New Travel Writing (Penguin, 1998), pp. viiߝxiii.
13. Robyn Davidson, ‘Introduction’, The Picador Book of Journeys (Picador, 2001), pp. 1ߝ7.
Part 3: Travel and Translation
14. William H. Sherman, ‘Bringing the World to England: The Politics of Translation in the Age of Hakluyt’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 2004, 14, 199ߝ207.
15. Loredana Polezzi, ‘Different Journeys Along the River: Claudio Magris’s Danubio and its Translation’, Modern Language Review, 1998, 93, 3 678ߝ94.
16. Michael Cronin, Travelling Minorities: Language, Translation and the Global’, in Jan Borm and Jean-Yves Le Disez (eds.), Seuils et Traverses: enjeux de l’écriture du voyage, Vol. 1 (Université de Bretagne Occidentale, 2002), pp. 249ߝ60.
17. Roxanne L. Euben, ‘Traveling Theorists and Translating Practices’ in Journeys to the Other Shore: Muslim and Western Travelers in Search of Knowledge (Princeton University Press, 2006), pp. 20ߝ45.
Volume II: The Contexts of Travel
Part 4: Sites and Zones
18. Peter Hulme, ‘Patagonian Cases: Travel Writing, Fiction, History’, in Jan Borm and Jean-Yves Le Disez (eds.), Seuils et Traverses: enjeux de l’écriture du voyage, Vol. 2 (Université de Bretagne Occidentale, 2002), pp. 223ߝ37.
19. Claire Lindsay, ‘Spectacular Andean Adventures’, Contemporary Travel Writing of Latin America (Routledge, 2010), pp. 47ߝ65.
20. Susan Morgan, ‘Place Matters’, Gendered Geography in Victorian Women’s Travel Books about Southeast Asia (Rutgers University Press, 1996), pp. 1ߝ30.
21. John Hutnyk, ‘Writing Calcutta’, The Rumour of Calcutta (Zed Books, 1996), pp. 86ߝ116.
22. David Espey, ‘Americans in Vietnam: Travel Writing and the War’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2004, 8, 2, 149ߝ78.
23. Alex Hughes, ‘On Being in the Place of the Cultural Other: Marc Boulet’s Travels in China and India’, Journal of European Studies, 2006, 36, 1, 43ߝ60.
24. Peter Bishop, ‘An Imaginative Geography’, The Myth of Shangri-La: Tibet, Travel Writing and the Western Creation of Sacred Landscape (Athlone Press, 1989), pp. 1ߝ24.
25. Lydia Wevers, ‘The Business of Travel’, Country of Writing: Travel, Writing and New Zealand (Auckland University Press, 2002), pp. 169ߝ86.
26. Robert Clarke, ‘Intimate Strangers: Contemporary Australian Travel Writing and the Semiotics of Empathy’, Journal of Australian Studies, 2005, 29, 69ߝ81.
27. Elisabeth Mudimbe-Boyi, ‘Travel, Representation, and Difference, or How Can One Be a Parisian?’, Research in African Literatures, 1992, 23, 3, 25ߝ39.
28. Sharon Ouditt, ‘Walking in the Footsteps of the Illustrious Dead: Nineteenth-Century Travellers in Southern Italy’, Journal of Anglo-Italian Studies, 2006, 8, 99ߝ113.
29. Alex Drace-Francis, ‘Paradoxes of Occidentalism: On Travel and Travel Writing in Ceauşescu’s Romania’, in A. Hammond (ed.), The Balkans and the West: Constructing the European Other, 1945ߝ2003 (Ashgate, 2004), pp. 69ߝ80.
30. E. Leane, ‘Antarctic Travel Writing and the Problematics of the Pristine: Two Australian Novelists’ Narratives of Tourist Voyages to Antarctica’, Proceedings of Imaging Nature: Media, Environment and Tourism, 27ߝ29 June 2004, Cradle Mountain, Tasmania (2005), pp. 1ߝ8.
Part 5: Times and Periods
31. Jaś Elsner and Joan Pau Rubiés, ‘Introduction’, in Elsner and Rubiés (eds.), Voyages and Visions: Towards a Cultural History of Travel (Reaktion, 1999), pp. 1ߝ15.
32. James Redfield, ‘Herodotus the Tourist’, Classical Philology, 1985, 80, 2, 97ߝ118.
33. Mary Baine Campbell, ‘Spiritual Quest and Social Space: Texts of Hard Travel for God on Earth and in the Heart’, in Elaine Treharne and Greg Walker (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Literature in English (Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 707ߝ24.
34. Peter Hulme, ‘Columbus and the Cannibals’, Colonial Encounters: Europe and the Native Caribbean, 1492ߝ1797 (Routledge, 1992), pp. 13ߝ43.
35. Michel de Certeau, ‘Travel Narratives of the French in Brazil: Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries’, Representations, 1991, 33, 221ߝ5.
36. Joan-Pau Rubies, ‘Travel Writing as a Genre: Facts, Fictions and the Invention of a Scientific Discourse in Early Modern Europe’, Journeys, 2000, 2, 1, 5ߝ35.
37. Mary Fuller, ‘Making Something of It: Questions of Value in the Early English Travel Collection’, Journal of Early Modern History, 2006, 6, 11ߝ38.
38. Tim Fulford and Debbie Lee, ‘Mental Travelers: Joseph Banks, Mungo Park, and the Romantic Imagination’, Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 2002, 24, 2, 117ߝ37.
39. Carl Thompson, ‘The Explorer as Saint: Mungo Park in West Africa’, The Suffering Traveller (Oxford University Press, 2007), pp. 170ߝ85.
40. Nigel Leask, ‘Introduction: Practices and Narratives of Romantic Travel’, Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel Writing 1770ߝ1840 (Oxford University Press, 2004), pp. 1ߝ14.
41. James Buzard, The Beaten Track: European Tourism, Literature, and the Ways to ‘Culture’, 1800ߝ1918 (Clarendon Press, 1993), pp. 64ߝ79.
42. Paul Fussell, ‘The Travel Atmosphere’, Abroad: British Literary Travelling Between the Wars (Oxford University Press, 1980), pp. 50ߝ64.
43. Graham Huggan and Patrick Holland, ‘Postmodern Itineraries’, Tourists with Typewriters: Critical Reflections on Contemporary Travel Writing (University of Michigan Press, 1998), pp. 157ߝ78.
Volume III: Modes of Travel, Types of Traveller
Part 6: Modes of Travel
44. Rebecca Solnit, ‘A Thousand Miles of Conventional Sentiment: The Literature of Walking’, Wanderlust: A History of Walking (Viking, 2000), pp. 118ߝ32.
45. Robin Jarvis, ‘Walking and Talking: Late-Romantic Voices’, Romantic Writing and Pedestrian Travel (Macmillan, 1997), pp. 192ߝ215.
46. Andrew Hassam, ‘Passenger Sketches and Social Identity’, Sailing to Australia: Shipboard Diaries by Nineteenth-Century British Emigrants (Manchester University Press, 1994), pp. 107ߝ34.
47. John Lucas, ‘Discovering England: The View from the Train’, Literature and History, 1997, 6, 2, 37ߝ55.
48. Denice Turner, ‘Imaginative Geographies and the Invention of the Aerial Subject’, Writing the Heavenly Frontier: Metaphor, Geography, and Flight Autobiography in America, 1927ߝ1954 (Rodopi, 2011), pp. 9ߝ24.
49. Sidonie Smith, ‘On the Road: (Auto)Mobility and Gendered Detours’, Moving Lives: Twentieth-Century Women’s Travel Writing (University of Minnesota Press, 2001), pp. 167ߝ202.
50. Alasdair Pettinger, ‘Trains, Boats and Planes: Some Reflections on Travel Writing and Public Transport’, in Jan Borm and Jean-Yves Le Disez (eds.), Seuils et Traverses: enjeux de l’écriture du voyage, Vol. 2 (Université de Bretagne Occidentale, 2002), pp. 107ߝ15.
51. Charles Forsdick, ‘Around the World in a 2CV: Post-War French Travel Writing and the Reordering of "Elsewhere"’, Travel in Twentieth-Century French and Francophone Cultures (Oxford University Press, 2005), pp. 106ߝ33.
Part 7: Types of Traveller
52. John Wilkinson, Jerusalem Pilgrimages Before the Crusades (Aris and Phillips, 2002), pp. 1ߝ27.
53. Paul Genoni, ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress Across Time: Medievalism and Modernity on the Road to Santiago’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2011, 15, 2, 157ߝ75.
54. Anna Johnston, ‘Missionary Writing in Polynesia’, Missionary Writing and Empire, 1800ߝ1860 (Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 136ߝ64.
55. Jeanne Kay Guelke and Karen M. Morin, ‘Gender, Nature, Empire: Women Naturalists in Nineteenth Century British Travel Literature’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 2001, 26, 3, 306ߝ26.
56. Felix Driver, ‘Distance and Disturbance: Travel, Exploration and Knowledge in the Nineteenth Century’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 2004, 14, 73ߝ92.
57. Richard White, ‘The Soldier as Tourist: The Australian Experience of the Great War’, War & Society, 1987, 5, 1, 63ߝ77.
58. Corinne Fowler, ‘"Replete with Danger": The Legacy of British Travel Narratives to News Media Coverage of Afghanistan’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2007, 11, 2, 155ߝ75.
59. Pia Sillanpää, ‘The Scandinavian Sporting Tour 1830ߝ1914’, in Brent Lovelock (ed.), Tourism and the Consumption of Wildlife: Hunting, Shooting and Sport Fishing (Routledge, 2008), pp. 59ߝ72.
60. Stephen Donovan, ‘Touring in Extremis: Travel and Adventure in the Congo’, in Tim Youngs (ed.), Travel Writing in the Nineteenth Century (Anthem Press, 2006), pp. 37ߝ54.
61. David Callahan, ‘Consuming and Erasing Portugal in the Lonely Planet Guide to East Timor’, Postcolonial Studies, 2011, 14, 1, 95ߝ109.
Volume IV: Approaches to travel
62. Jan Borm, ‘Defining Travel: On the Travel Book, Travel Writing and Terminology’, in Glenn Hooper and Tim Youngs (eds.), Perspectives on Travel Writing (Ashgate, 2004), pp. 13ߝ26.
63. James Clifford, ‘Notes on Theory and Travel’, in James Clifford and Vivek Dhareshwar (eds.), Traveling Theories: Traveling Theorists (1989), pp. 177ߝ88.
64. Jean-Didier Urbain, ‘I Travel, Therefore I Am: The "Nomad Mind" and the Spirit of Travel?’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2000, 4, 1, 141ߝ64.
65. Ali Behdad, ‘The Politics of Adventure: Theories of Travel, Discourses of Power’, in Kuehn and Smethurst, Travel Writing, Form and the Empire: The Poetics and Politics of Mobility (Routledge, 2009), pp. 80ߝ94.
66. Susan Bassnett, ‘Constructing Cultures: The Politics of Travellers’ Tales’, Comparative Literature: A Critical Introduction (Wiley-Blackwell, 1993), pp. 92ߝ114.
67. David Scott, ‘Jungle Books: (Mis-)reading the Jungle with Gide, Michaux and Leiris’, Semiologies of Travel: From Gautier to Baudrillard (Cambridge University Press, 2005), pp. 161ߝ88.
68. Krim Benterrak, Stephen Muecke, and Paddy Roe, Reading the Country: Introduction to Nomadology (Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1984), pp. 15ߝ21.
69. Mary Louise Pratt, ‘Modernity, Mobility and Ex-coloniality’, in Jan Borm and Jean-Yves Le Disez (eds.), Seuils et Traverses: enjeux de l’écriture du voyage, Vol. 1 (Université de Bretagne Occidentale, 2002), pp. 107ߝ15.
70. James Duncan and Derek Gregory, ‘Spaces of Representation’ and ‘Spaces of Travel’, in James Duncan and Derek Gregory (eds.), Writes of Passage: Reading Travel Writing (Routledge, 1999), pp. 3ߝ8.
71. Wendy Bracewell, ‘New Men, Old Europe: Being a Man in Balkan Travel Writing’, in Wendy Bracewell and Alex Drace-Francis (eds.), Balkan Departures: Travel Writing from Southeastern Europe (Berghahn Books, 2009), pp. 137ߝ60.
72. Sara Mills, ‘Feminist Work on Women’s Travel Writing’, Discourses of Difference: An Analysis of Women’s Travel Writing and Colonialism (Routledge, 1993), pp. 27ߝ46.
73. Elizabeth Hagglund, ‘Travel Writing as Domestic Ritual’, Mind and Human Interaction, 2005, 14, 1, 89ߝ95.
74. Johannes Fabian, ‘Time, Narration, and the Exploration of Central Africa’, Narrative, 2001, 9, 1, 3ߝ20.
75. Neil L. Whitehead, ‘The Historical Anthropology of Text: The Interpretation of Ralegh’s Discoverie of Guiana’, Current Anthropology, 1995, 36, 1, 53ߝ63.
76. Pat Hohepa, ‘My Musket, My Missionary, and My Mana’, in Alex Calder, Jonathan Lamb, and Bridget Orr (eds.), Voyages and Beaches: Pacific Encounters, 1769ߝ1840 (University of Hawai’i Press, 1999), pp. 180ߝ201.
77. Jopi Nyman, ‘Fancy Some Cobra? Exploring Vietnamese Cuisine in Contemporary Culinary Travelogues’, Journeys: The International Journal of Travel and Travel Writing, 2003, 4, 1, 84ߝ102.
78. Aedín Ní Loingsigh, ‘L’Africain du Groenland: "Primitive" on "Primitives"’, Postcolonial Eyes (Liverpool University Press, 2009), pp. 123ߝ49.
79. Greg Dening, ‘Voyaging the Past, Present, and Future: Historical Reenactments on HM Bark Endeavour and the Voyaging Canoe Hokule’a in the Sea of Islands’, in F. A. Nussbaum (ed.), The Global Eighteenth Century (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003), pp. 309ߝ24.
80. Richard Phillips, ‘Decolonising Geographies of Travel: Reading James/Jan Morris’, Social and Cultural Geography, 2001, 2, 1, 5ߝ24.
81. Tim Youngs, ‘Pushing Against the Black/White Limits of Maps: African American Writings of Travel’, English Studies in Africa, 2010, 53, 2, 71ߝ85.
Part 1: Writing Travel
1. Jonathan Raban, ‘The Journey and the Book’, For Love and Money: Writing, Reading, Travelling, 1969ߝ1987 (Collins Harvill, 1987), pp. 253ߝ60.
2. Ella Maillart, ‘My Philosophy of Travel’, Traveller’s Quest: Original Contributions Towards a Philosophy of Travel (William Hodge, 1950), pp. 114ߝ26.
3. Tim Youngs, ‘Interview with Robyn Davidson’, Studies in Travel Writing, March 2005, 9, 1, 21ߝ36.
4. Colin Thubron, ‘Travel Writing Today: Its Rise and Its Dilemma’, in A. N. Wilson (ed.), Essays by Diverse Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature (Boydell, 1984), pp. 167ߝ81.
Part 2: Editing and Publishing Travel
5. Daniel Carey, ‘Hakluyt’s Instructions: The Principal Navigations and Sixteenth-Century Travel Advice’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2009, 13, 2, 167ߝ85.
6. David Henige, ‘Tractable Texts: Modern Editing and the Columbian Writings’, in Germaine Warkentin (ed.), Critical Issues in Editing Exploration Texts: Papers Given at the Twenty-Eighth Annual Conference on Editorial Problems, University of Toronto, 6ߝ7 November 1992 (University of Toronto Press, 1995), pp. 1ߝ35.
7. J. C. Beaglehole, ‘Some Problems of Editing Cook’s Journals’, Historical Studies, 1957, 8, 1ߝ12.
8. Gary E. Moulton, ‘Editorial Procedures’ for The Journals of Lewis and Clark (lewisandclarkjournals.unl.edu).
9. Marie‐Noëlle Bourguet, ‘A Portable World: The Notebooks of European Travellers’, Intellectual History Review, 2010, 20, 3, 377ߝ400.
10. C. W. J. Withers and I. M. Keighren, ‘Travels into Print: Authoring, Editing and Narratives of Travel, c. 1815ߝc. 1857’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 2011, 36, 560ߝ73.
11. Charles Sugnet, ‘Vile Bodies, Vile Places: Travelling with Granta’, Transition, 1991, 51, 70ߝ85.
12. Dea Birkett and Sara Wheeler, ‘Introduction’, in Dea Birkett and Sara Wheeler (eds.), Amazonian: The Penguin Book of Women’s New Travel Writing (Penguin, 1998), pp. viiߝxiii.
13. Robyn Davidson, ‘Introduction’, The Picador Book of Journeys (Picador, 2001), pp. 1ߝ7.
Part 3: Travel and Translation
14. William H. Sherman, ‘Bringing the World to England: The Politics of Translation in the Age of Hakluyt’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 2004, 14, 199ߝ207.
15. Loredana Polezzi, ‘Different Journeys Along the River: Claudio Magris’s Danubio and its Translation’, Modern Language Review, 1998, 93, 3 678ߝ94.
16. Michael Cronin, Travelling Minorities: Language, Translation and the Global’, in Jan Borm and Jean-Yves Le Disez (eds.), Seuils et Traverses: enjeux de l’écriture du voyage, Vol. 1 (Université de Bretagne Occidentale, 2002), pp. 249ߝ60.
17. Roxanne L. Euben, ‘Traveling Theorists and Translating Practices’ in Journeys to the Other Shore: Muslim and Western Travelers in Search of Knowledge (Princeton University Press, 2006), pp. 20ߝ45.
Volume II: The Contexts of Travel
Part 4: Sites and Zones
18. Peter Hulme, ‘Patagonian Cases: Travel Writing, Fiction, History’, in Jan Borm and Jean-Yves Le Disez (eds.), Seuils et Traverses: enjeux de l’écriture du voyage, Vol. 2 (Université de Bretagne Occidentale, 2002), pp. 223ߝ37.
19. Claire Lindsay, ‘Spectacular Andean Adventures’, Contemporary Travel Writing of Latin America (Routledge, 2010), pp. 47ߝ65.
20. Susan Morgan, ‘Place Matters’, Gendered Geography in Victorian Women’s Travel Books about Southeast Asia (Rutgers University Press, 1996), pp. 1ߝ30.
21. John Hutnyk, ‘Writing Calcutta’, The Rumour of Calcutta (Zed Books, 1996), pp. 86ߝ116.
22. David Espey, ‘Americans in Vietnam: Travel Writing and the War’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2004, 8, 2, 149ߝ78.
23. Alex Hughes, ‘On Being in the Place of the Cultural Other: Marc Boulet’s Travels in China and India’, Journal of European Studies, 2006, 36, 1, 43ߝ60.
24. Peter Bishop, ‘An Imaginative Geography’, The Myth of Shangri-La: Tibet, Travel Writing and the Western Creation of Sacred Landscape (Athlone Press, 1989), pp. 1ߝ24.
25. Lydia Wevers, ‘The Business of Travel’, Country of Writing: Travel, Writing and New Zealand (Auckland University Press, 2002), pp. 169ߝ86.
26. Robert Clarke, ‘Intimate Strangers: Contemporary Australian Travel Writing and the Semiotics of Empathy’, Journal of Australian Studies, 2005, 29, 69ߝ81.
27. Elisabeth Mudimbe-Boyi, ‘Travel, Representation, and Difference, or How Can One Be a Parisian?’, Research in African Literatures, 1992, 23, 3, 25ߝ39.
28. Sharon Ouditt, ‘Walking in the Footsteps of the Illustrious Dead: Nineteenth-Century Travellers in Southern Italy’, Journal of Anglo-Italian Studies, 2006, 8, 99ߝ113.
29. Alex Drace-Francis, ‘Paradoxes of Occidentalism: On Travel and Travel Writing in Ceauşescu’s Romania’, in A. Hammond (ed.), The Balkans and the West: Constructing the European Other, 1945ߝ2003 (Ashgate, 2004), pp. 69ߝ80.
30. E. Leane, ‘Antarctic Travel Writing and the Problematics of the Pristine: Two Australian Novelists’ Narratives of Tourist Voyages to Antarctica’, Proceedings of Imaging Nature: Media, Environment and Tourism, 27ߝ29 June 2004, Cradle Mountain, Tasmania (2005), pp. 1ߝ8.
Part 5: Times and Periods
31. Jaś Elsner and Joan Pau Rubiés, ‘Introduction’, in Elsner and Rubiés (eds.), Voyages and Visions: Towards a Cultural History of Travel (Reaktion, 1999), pp. 1ߝ15.
32. James Redfield, ‘Herodotus the Tourist’, Classical Philology, 1985, 80, 2, 97ߝ118.
33. Mary Baine Campbell, ‘Spiritual Quest and Social Space: Texts of Hard Travel for God on Earth and in the Heart’, in Elaine Treharne and Greg Walker (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Literature in English (Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 707ߝ24.
34. Peter Hulme, ‘Columbus and the Cannibals’, Colonial Encounters: Europe and the Native Caribbean, 1492ߝ1797 (Routledge, 1992), pp. 13ߝ43.
35. Michel de Certeau, ‘Travel Narratives of the French in Brazil: Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries’, Representations, 1991, 33, 221ߝ5.
36. Joan-Pau Rubies, ‘Travel Writing as a Genre: Facts, Fictions and the Invention of a Scientific Discourse in Early Modern Europe’, Journeys, 2000, 2, 1, 5ߝ35.
37. Mary Fuller, ‘Making Something of It: Questions of Value in the Early English Travel Collection’, Journal of Early Modern History, 2006, 6, 11ߝ38.
38. Tim Fulford and Debbie Lee, ‘Mental Travelers: Joseph Banks, Mungo Park, and the Romantic Imagination’, Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 2002, 24, 2, 117ߝ37.
39. Carl Thompson, ‘The Explorer as Saint: Mungo Park in West Africa’, The Suffering Traveller (Oxford University Press, 2007), pp. 170ߝ85.
40. Nigel Leask, ‘Introduction: Practices and Narratives of Romantic Travel’, Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel Writing 1770ߝ1840 (Oxford University Press, 2004), pp. 1ߝ14.
41. James Buzard, The Beaten Track: European Tourism, Literature, and the Ways to ‘Culture’, 1800ߝ1918 (Clarendon Press, 1993), pp. 64ߝ79.
42. Paul Fussell, ‘The Travel Atmosphere’, Abroad: British Literary Travelling Between the Wars (Oxford University Press, 1980), pp. 50ߝ64.
43. Graham Huggan and Patrick Holland, ‘Postmodern Itineraries’, Tourists with Typewriters: Critical Reflections on Contemporary Travel Writing (University of Michigan Press, 1998), pp. 157ߝ78.
Volume III: Modes of Travel, Types of Traveller
Part 6: Modes of Travel
44. Rebecca Solnit, ‘A Thousand Miles of Conventional Sentiment: The Literature of Walking’, Wanderlust: A History of Walking (Viking, 2000), pp. 118ߝ32.
45. Robin Jarvis, ‘Walking and Talking: Late-Romantic Voices’, Romantic Writing and Pedestrian Travel (Macmillan, 1997), pp. 192ߝ215.
46. Andrew Hassam, ‘Passenger Sketches and Social Identity’, Sailing to Australia: Shipboard Diaries by Nineteenth-Century British Emigrants (Manchester University Press, 1994), pp. 107ߝ34.
47. John Lucas, ‘Discovering England: The View from the Train’, Literature and History, 1997, 6, 2, 37ߝ55.
48. Denice Turner, ‘Imaginative Geographies and the Invention of the Aerial Subject’, Writing the Heavenly Frontier: Metaphor, Geography, and Flight Autobiography in America, 1927ߝ1954 (Rodopi, 2011), pp. 9ߝ24.
49. Sidonie Smith, ‘On the Road: (Auto)Mobility and Gendered Detours’, Moving Lives: Twentieth-Century Women’s Travel Writing (University of Minnesota Press, 2001), pp. 167ߝ202.
50. Alasdair Pettinger, ‘Trains, Boats and Planes: Some Reflections on Travel Writing and Public Transport’, in Jan Borm and Jean-Yves Le Disez (eds.), Seuils et Traverses: enjeux de l’écriture du voyage, Vol. 2 (Université de Bretagne Occidentale, 2002), pp. 107ߝ15.
51. Charles Forsdick, ‘Around the World in a 2CV: Post-War French Travel Writing and the Reordering of "Elsewhere"’, Travel in Twentieth-Century French and Francophone Cultures (Oxford University Press, 2005), pp. 106ߝ33.
Part 7: Types of Traveller
52. John Wilkinson, Jerusalem Pilgrimages Before the Crusades (Aris and Phillips, 2002), pp. 1ߝ27.
53. Paul Genoni, ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress Across Time: Medievalism and Modernity on the Road to Santiago’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2011, 15, 2, 157ߝ75.
54. Anna Johnston, ‘Missionary Writing in Polynesia’, Missionary Writing and Empire, 1800ߝ1860 (Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 136ߝ64.
55. Jeanne Kay Guelke and Karen M. Morin, ‘Gender, Nature, Empire: Women Naturalists in Nineteenth Century British Travel Literature’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 2001, 26, 3, 306ߝ26.
56. Felix Driver, ‘Distance and Disturbance: Travel, Exploration and Knowledge in the Nineteenth Century’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 2004, 14, 73ߝ92.
57. Richard White, ‘The Soldier as Tourist: The Australian Experience of the Great War’, War & Society, 1987, 5, 1, 63ߝ77.
58. Corinne Fowler, ‘"Replete with Danger": The Legacy of British Travel Narratives to News Media Coverage of Afghanistan’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2007, 11, 2, 155ߝ75.
59. Pia Sillanpää, ‘The Scandinavian Sporting Tour 1830ߝ1914’, in Brent Lovelock (ed.), Tourism and the Consumption of Wildlife: Hunting, Shooting and Sport Fishing (Routledge, 2008), pp. 59ߝ72.
60. Stephen Donovan, ‘Touring in Extremis: Travel and Adventure in the Congo’, in Tim Youngs (ed.), Travel Writing in the Nineteenth Century (Anthem Press, 2006), pp. 37ߝ54.
61. David Callahan, ‘Consuming and Erasing Portugal in the Lonely Planet Guide to East Timor’, Postcolonial Studies, 2011, 14, 1, 95ߝ109.
Volume IV: Approaches to travel
62. Jan Borm, ‘Defining Travel: On the Travel Book, Travel Writing and Terminology’, in Glenn Hooper and Tim Youngs (eds.), Perspectives on Travel Writing (Ashgate, 2004), pp. 13ߝ26.
63. James Clifford, ‘Notes on Theory and Travel’, in James Clifford and Vivek Dhareshwar (eds.), Traveling Theories: Traveling Theorists (1989), pp. 177ߝ88.
64. Jean-Didier Urbain, ‘I Travel, Therefore I Am: The "Nomad Mind" and the Spirit of Travel?’, Studies in Travel Writing, 2000, 4, 1, 141ߝ64.
65. Ali Behdad, ‘The Politics of Adventure: Theories of Travel, Discourses of Power’, in Kuehn and Smethurst, Travel Writing, Form and the Empire: The Poetics and Politics of Mobility (Routledge, 2009), pp. 80ߝ94.
66. Susan Bassnett, ‘Constructing Cultures: The Politics of Travellers’ Tales’, Comparative Literature: A Critical Introduction (Wiley-Blackwell, 1993), pp. 92ߝ114.
67. David Scott, ‘Jungle Books: (Mis-)reading the Jungle with Gide, Michaux and Leiris’, Semiologies of Travel: From Gautier to Baudrillard (Cambridge University Press, 2005), pp. 161ߝ88.
68. Krim Benterrak, Stephen Muecke, and Paddy Roe, Reading the Country: Introduction to Nomadology (Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1984), pp. 15ߝ21.
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