Nineteenth-Century British Travelers in the New World

Nineteenth-Century British Travelers in the New World

by Christine DeVine
Nineteenth-Century British Travelers in the New World

Nineteenth-Century British Travelers in the New World

by Christine DeVine

eBook

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Overview

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.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781409473473
Publisher: Ashgate Publishing Ltd
Publication date: 02/28/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Christine DeVine is Mary E. Dichmann/BORSF Endowed Professor of English at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA.

Table of Contents

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
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