Results for 'travel writings'

957 found
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  1.  15
    Mediterranean Travels: Writing Self and Other From the Ancient World to Contemporary Society.Patrick Crowley, Noreen Humble & Silvia M. Ross (eds.) - 2011 - Legenda/ Modern Humanities Research Association and Maney Publishing.
    Written by leading scholars in the field, this collection analyses the notion of travel writing as a genre, while tracing significant examples of Mediterranean travel writing that return us to Ancient Greece, to Medieval pilgrimages, to Venetians diplomatic missions, to an Egyptian's account of Paris in the nineteenth century, to French artistic journeys in North Africa and to contemporary narratives of privileged resettlement, death and dislocation.
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  2.  13
    Travel Writing and Cultural Memory in Late-Ming Beijing.Naixi Feng - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 142 (1).
    Focusing on A Sketch of Sites and Objects in the Imperial Capital, this article examines how the primary author, Liu Tong, created and preserved the cultural memory of Beijing through writing the city’s scenic sites in the waning years of the Ming dynasty. Liu Tong, who sojourned in the capital then situated on the state’s frontier, observed Beijing during a period of comprehensive decay. This temporal and spatial framework affected the way he observed Beijing’s northern landscape features and inspired him (...)
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  3.  17
    Symbolic interpretation of sea songs and shanties in sea travel writing.Pilar Garcés García - 2022 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (1):1-8.
    Travel writing is characterized by a narrative discourse that describes landscapes, transforms adventure into a mythical journey and reveals the fears of humankind. The sea gathers momentum when the protagonists overcome the fear of death. However, the significance of the tune of sea songs has not been adequately highlighted, being relegated as side special effects that embellish the narration. The aim of this paper is to analyze the symbolical element of the songs to foreground its function in sea (...) writing in the English and American fiction from the 18th to the 21st century accounts, and their symbolic implication. (shrink)
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  4.  6
    Ethics of description: the anthropological dispositif and French modern travel writing.Matt Reeck - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Ethics of Description: The Anthropological Dispositif and French Modern Travel Writing follows the development of a minor tradition in French literature where metropolitan authors traveling abroad demonstrate their awareness of the ethical conundrums of representing world peoples. During the colonial-modern era, currents of anthropological thought and representational practice are identifiable throughout society, and across literature, the arts, and the sciences. Collectively, they can be theorized as belonging to a dispositif, the anthropological dispositif. The modernization of anthropology serves as an (...)
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  5. Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel Writing 1770-1840: From an Antique Land.Nigel Leask - 2002 - Oxford University Press.
    The first book of its kind to study the Romantic obsession with the 'antique lands' of Ethiopia, Egypt, India, and Mexico, Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel Writing is an important contribution to the recent wave of interest in exotic travel writing. Drawing generously on both original texts and modern scholarship in literature, history, geography, and anthropology, it focuses on the unstable discourse of 'curiosity' to offer an important reformulation of the relations between literature, aesthetics, and colonialism in (...)
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  6.  21
    Inscribed Landscapes: Travel Writing from Imperial China.Deborah Rudolph & Richard E. Strassberg - 1996 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 116 (1):121.
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  7.  12
    The power of Lingua Franca: the presence of the “Other” in the travel writing genre.Maximiliano E. Korstanje - 2022 - Cultura 19 (2):73-85.
    Classic Edward Said´s term Orientalism was widely applied to those narratives and story-telling oriented to deride, subordinate and domesticate the “Non-Western Other”. Over centuries, Europe has developed an imperial matrix that is finely enrooted in an uncanny long-dormant paternalism where “the Other” was treated as a child to educate. The European expansion was ultimately feasible according to two combined factors. The knowledge productions by the hands of scientists occupied a great position in the entertainment of global readerships, and of course, (...)
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  8.  6
    Ethical Representation and Spiritual Reflections: The Portrayal of Poverty and China’s Image in Travel Writings Li Oder Im Neuen Osten.Qiao Chen & Yifan Hu - 2024 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 16 (1):428-440.
    This study examines the travel writings of the German author Alfons Paquet, specifically his book Li oder Im neuen Osten (1913), which documents his observations during three visits to East Asia in the late Qing Dynasty. The paper begins by contextualizing Paquet's journeys, considering personal, ideological, and social factors that influenced his perceptions and writings. The analysis then delves into Paquet’s portrayal of poverty, rural landscapes, warfare, and the cultural interactions between East and West as described in (...)
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  9.  26
    Pausanias (M.) Pretzler Pausanias. Travel Writing in Ancient Greece. Pp. xiv + 225, maps. London: Duckworth, 2007. Paper, £18. ISBN: 978-0-7156-3496-. [REVIEW]Thomas Schmidt - 2009 - The Classical Review 59 (2):423-.
  10.  26
    Outward bound: women translators and scientific travel writing, 1780–1800.Alison E. Martin - 2016 - Annals of Science 73 (2):157-169.
    SUMMARYAs the Enlightenment drew to a close, translation had gradually acquired an increasingly important role in the international circulation and transmission of scientific knowledge. Yet comparatively little attention has been paid to the translators responsible for making such accounts accessible in other languages, some of whom were women. In this article I explore how European women cast themselves as intellectually enquiring, knowledgeable and authoritative figures in their translations. Focusing specifically on the genre of scientific travel writing, I investigate the (...)
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  11. (1 other version)Colonial Memory: Contemporary Women’s Travel Writing in Britain and the Netherlands.[author unknown] - 2011
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  12.  18
    Robert Louis Stevenson's Pacific Impressions: Photography and Travel Writing, 1888–1894 by Carla Manfredi.Richard Hill - 2021 - Intertexts 25 (1-2):131-135.
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  13.  29
    Mary F. McVicker, Women Adventurers, 1750-1900. A Biographical Dictionary with Excerpts from Selected Travel Writings.Nicolas Bourguinat - 2008 - Clio 28:275-275.
    Ce livre est, comme le titre l’indique, un objet hybride, à la fois dictionnaire et anthologie. L’auteur n’est pas une historienne professionnelle mais une écrivaine, déjà auteur d’une biographie d’une de ses aventurières, l’Anglaise Adela Breton, qui fut une pionnière des séjours et des relevés archéologiques à travers le Mexique précolombien à la fin du xixe siècle (Albuquerque, University of New Mexico Press, 2005). Chaque notice individuelle est suivie d’une indication de sources (parfois...
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  14.  12
    Over the Alps: Reflections on Travel and Travel Writing with Special Reference to the Grand Tours of Boswell, Beckford and Byron.Patrick Anderson - 1969 - HarperCollins Publishers.
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  15. Roland Barthes the pianist: The mediation of his music ('Barthes and Utopia':'Space, Travel, Writing'by Diana Knight).Roland A. Champagne - 1999 - Semiotica 123 (3-4):357-366.
     
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  16.  26
    Narrating Travel, Narrating the Self: Considering Women‘s Travel Writing as Life Writing.Zoë Kinsley - 2014 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 90 (2):67-84.
    This article considers the ways in which eighteenth-century womens travel narratives function as autobiographical texts, examining the process by which a travellers dislocation from home can enable exploration of the self through the observation and description of place. It also, however, highlights the complexity of the relationship between two forms of writing which a contemporary readership viewed as in many ways distinctly different. The travel accounts considered, composed in manuscript form, in many ways contest the assumption that manuscript (...)
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  17.  28
    The Witness and the Other World: Exotic European Travel Writing, 400-1600Mary B. Campbell.Katharine Park - 1990 - Isis 81 (2):338-339.
  18.  40
    " A Melancholy Instance of Complicated Misery": Ireland and Irish National Identity in Eighteenth Century English Travel Writing.Padhraig Higgins - 1995 - American Journal of Semiotics 12 (1-4):403-424.
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  19.  24
    The Myth of Shangri-La: Tibet, Travel Writing and the Western Creation of Sacred Landscape.Elliot Sperling & Peter Bishop - 1992 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 112 (2):349.
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  20.  43
    Haunted Journeys: Desire and Transgression in European Travel Writing.Andrea Loselle & Dennis Porter - 1992 - Substance 21 (3):144.
  21.  13
    The witness and the other world: Exotic European travel writing, 400–1600.Dorothy Koenigsberger - 1991 - History of European Ideas 13 (3):286-287.
  22.  67
    Baedekers as Casualty: Great War Nationalism and the Fate of Travel Writing.Mark D. Larabee - 2010 - Journal of the History of Ideas 71 (3):457-480.
    This article addresses the critically neglected relation between Baedekers and nationalism, in order to articulate the reasons for the decline of the Baedeker empire in the early twentieth century. Conditions in the First World War undermined the Baedekers' foundational concepts of landscape description. Additionally, the guidebooks emblematized a lost pre-war style of international journey. However, evidence in unexplored archival and fictional sources qualifies our understanding of these changes. This article revisits and reconciles such assessments, by explaining how the war also (...)
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  23.  38
    Kim M. Phillips, Before Orientalism: Asian Peoples and Cultures in European Travel Writing, 1245–1510. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014. Pp. ix, 314; 6 black-and-white figures. $79.95. ISBN: 978-0-8122-4548-6. [REVIEW]Jorge Flores - 2015 - Speculum 90 (2):576-577.
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  24.  43
    Writing between the lines, reading between the lines: The transformation of the European tradition in Soviet literature of travel.Marina Balina - 1996 - The European Legacy 1 (4):1641-1646.
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  25.  28
    Writing Mexico: Travel and Intercultural Encounter in Contemporary American Literature.Elisabeth Mermann-Jozwiak - 2009 - Symploke 17 (1-2):95-114.
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  26.  5
    (1 other version)Bertrand Russell's America: His Transatlantic Travels and Writings. Volume Two 1945-1970.Barry Feinberg & Ronald Kasrils - 1984 - Routledge.
    Originally published in 1984, this volume documents Bertrand Russell’s travels in America covering the period 1945-1970. It is presented in two halves with the first a biographical account of Russell’s involvement with the United States, with special reference to the seven visits he made there during this time period. Throughout this section the most representative of Russell’s journalistic writings are highlighted and these are presented as full texts in the second half of the book. This collection is assembled to (...)
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  27.  6
    Travel Narrative and the Problem of Human Nature in Locke, Shaftesbury, and Hutcheson.Daniel Carey - 1993
  28.  29
    Historicizing american travel, at home and abroad.Leslie Butler - 2011 - Modern Intellectual History 8 (1):237-251.
    In the winter of 1859, the Boston poet Julia Ward Howe sailed for Cuba; and in the winter of 1860, Ticknor and Fields published an account of her travel. A Trip to Cuba appeared only months after the same firm had published Richard Henry Dana's story of his ???vacation voyage,??? To Cuba and Back . These two narratives responded to a burgeoning American interest in the Caribbean island that promised recuperation to American invalids and adventure for military ???filibusters.??? Howe's (...)
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  29.  18
    Einstein’s Travels: Diana Kormos Buchwald, József Illy, Ze’ev Rosenkranz, Tilman Sauer : The collected papers of Albert Einstein: The Berlin years, writings and correspondence, January 1922–March 1923, Volume 13. Princeton, NJ. Princeton University Press, 2012, 1080pp. $137.50 HB.David E. Rowe - 2015 - Metascience 24 (3):433-435.
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  30.  35
    "The great ocean of knowledge": the influence of travel literature on the work of John Locke.Ann Talbot - 2010 - Boston: Brill.
    This book explores the way in which, working within the investigative tradition associated with the Royal Society, the philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) used ...
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  31. Iain Macleod Higgins, Writing East: The “Travels” of Sir John Mandeville.(Middle Ages Series.) Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1997. Pp. xi, 335; 1 black-and-white figure and 1 table. $49.95. [REVIEW]Kathryn L. Lynch - 2001 - Speculum 76 (2):469-471.
     
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  32.  4
    Bertrand Russell's America: His Transatlantic Travels and Writings. Volume One 1896-1945.Barry Feinberg & Ronald Kasrils - 1973 - London, England: Routledge. Edited by Ronald Kasrils & Bertrand Russell.
    Originally published in 1973, this volume documents Bertrand Russell’s travels in America covering the period 1896-1945. It is presented in two halves with the first a biographical account of Russell’s involvement with the United States, with special reference to the seven visits he made there during this time period. Throughout this section the most representative of Russell’s journalistic writings are highlighted and these are presented as full texts in the second half of the book. This collection is assembled to (...)
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  33.  6
    Reading and Writing the East in,Mandeville´s Travels'.Lydia Wegener & Andreas Speer - 2006 - In Lydia Wegener & Andreas Speer (eds.), Wissen Über Grenzen: Arabisches Wissen Und Lateinisches Mittelalter. Walter de Gruyter.
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  34.  59
    Pausanias: Travel and Memory in Roman Greece (review).Susan Guettel Cole - 2002 - American Journal of Philology 123 (4):633-637.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:American Journal of Philology 123.4 (2002) 633-637 [Access article in PDF] Susan E. Alcock, John F. Cherry, and Jas; Elsner, eds. Pausanias: Travel and Memory in Roman Greece. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. xii + 379 pp. Cloth, $65. As he moves from monument to monument and polis to polis, Pausanias gives the impression that the sun is always shining and the weather fresh and sweet. Beyond the (...)
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  35.  49
    Representations of Tropical Forests and Tropical Forest-Dwellers in Travel Accounts of National Geographic.Anja Nygren - 2006 - Environmental Values 15 (4):505-525.
    As one of the most widely read genres of literature, travel writing plays a crucial role in forming popular images and understandings of foreign places and foreign peoples. This essay examines the dominant images of rainforests and rainforest peoples portrayed in accounts of travels in tropical America published in National Geographic. Special attention is paid to the issues of how particular representations are privileged in this magazine's travel accounts and how these representations relate to questions of authority and (...)
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  36.  64
    Compiling nature's history: Travellers and travel narratives in the early royal society.Daniel Carey - 1997 - Annals of Science 54 (3):269-292.
    SummaryThe relationship between travel, travel narrative, and the enterprise of natural history is explored, focusing on activities associated with the early Royal Society. In an era of expanding travel, for colonial, diplomatic, trade, and missionary purposes, reports of nature's effects proliferated, both in oral and written forms. Naturalists intent on compiling a comprehensive history of such phenomena, and making them useful in the process, readily incorporated these reports into their work. They went further by trying to direct (...)
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  37.  29
    Polynesia and polygenism: the scientific use of travel literature in the early 19th century.Michael C. Carhart - 2009 - History of the Human Sciences 22 (2):58-86.
    Christoph Meiners (1747—1810) was one of 18th-century Europe's most important readers of global travel literature, and he has been credited as a founder of the disciplines of ethnology and anthropology. This article examines a part of his final work, Untersuchungen über die Verschiedenheiten der Menschennaturen [Inquiries on the differences of human natures], published posthumously in the 1810s. Here Meiners developed an elaborate argument, based on empirical evidence, that the different races of men emerged indigenously at different times and in (...)
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  38.  34
    Lila Marz Harper. Solitary Travelers: Nineteenth‐Century Women's Travel Narratives and the Scientific Vocation. 277 pp., illus., bibl., index. Madison/Teaneck, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press; London: Associated University Presses, 2001. $45. [REVIEW]Maria Frawley - 2002 - Isis 93 (2):317-318.
    Solitary Travelers takes its place alongside other revisionary works that assess the contribution of women writers to nineteenth‐century fields of study and disciplines of learning identified as male and associated with science. Lila Harper foregrounds the role of travel narratives in her analysis, arguing that they facilitated access to a scientific vocation for women writers and, indeed, that some women gravitated to travel writing “in a common quest for the professional recognition which seemed to be promised within a (...)
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  39.  15
    Unsuitable for Ladies: An Anthology of Women Travellers.Jane Robinson (ed.) - 2001 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Real ladies do not travel - or so it was once said. This collection of women's travel writing dispels this notion by revealing that there are few corners of the world that have not been visited by women travellers. Jane Robinson takes us on an exhilarating journey through sixteen centuries of travel writing, in the company of Isabella Bird, Karen Blixen, Christina Dodwell, Jan Morris, Dervla Murphy, Freya Stark, Rebecca West, and many more.
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  40.  13
    Idea slow travel a rozwój reportażu podróżniczego. O intermedialnym projekcie Out of Eden Walk Paula Salopka.Edyta Żyrek-Horodyska - 2021 - Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Polonica 62 (3):117-134.
    This article is devoted to presenting the intermedia journalistic project called Out of Eden Walk and launched by American reporter Paul Salopek. Based on values such as journalistic reliability and the in-depth view of the reality, the project can be situated within the framework of the popular strands of slow journalism and slow travel. Salopek’s intention was to present Out of Eden Walk as an alternative to the rapidity of mass media communication and popular travel writing. The purpose (...)
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  41.  31
    Representations of China by Western Travellers in the Blogsphere.Stefano Calzati - 2016 - Cultura 13 (2):153-172.
    This article adopts a transmedial perspective in order to investigate narrative similarities and differences between print and online travel writing. Texts, which are contemporary and Western-authored, are written either in English, French and Italian and they all focus on China as the travel destination. Drawing upon Gérard Genette and Mieke Bal's studies on the narrative discourse, it is contended that travel books and travel blogs, despite sharing basic generic features, present substantial differences. In the former, readers (...)
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  42.  9
    The Interior Tourist: Travel, Tourism, and the Path to Self-Discovery from Platonism to the Pandemic.Marie-Élise Zovko - 2023 - In Marie-Élise Zovko & John Dillon (eds.), Tourism and Culture in Philosophical Perspective. Springer Verlag. pp. 45-62.
    Our journeys are never only to the exterior: the interior journey of the traveller has a long tradition, witnessed in travel writings of authors like Montaigne and Unamuno, and in the history of literature as a whole understood as a hodoeporics. We ceaselessly pursue things which give us pleasure and fulfil our needs, including the specific kind of enjoyment that travel and tourism afford. The desire to travel is closely tied to an original kind of nostalgia, (...)
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  43.  33
    Counterpath: traveling with Jacques Derrida.Catherine Malabou - 2004 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. Edited by Jacques Derrida.
    Counterpath is a collaborative work by Catherine Malabou and Jacques Derrida that answers to the gamble inherent in the idea of “travelling with” the philosopher of deconstruction. Malabou's readerly text of quotations and commentary demonstrates how Derrida's work, while appearing to be anything but a travelogue, is nevertheless replete with references to geographical and topographical locations, and functions as a kind of counter-Odyssey through meaning, theorizing, and thematizing notions of arrival, drifting, derivation, and catastrophe. In fact, by going straight to (...)
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  44.  29
    Time traveler confirms five minute hypothesis!Roy Sorensen - 2024 - Synthese 204 (2):1-14.
    Conclusion: What matters for any norm is personal time rather than time. Personal time is a time-like relation (roughly, the time measured by your wristwatch) that knits together scattered temporal parts so that they conform to familiar patterns. David Lewis introduced personal time as an interpretive fiction that allows readers to consistently read fictions about time travelers. Inadvertently, Lewis thereby introduced a metric for all value (including prudence, morality, and aesthetics). Premise: The application of any norm requires personal time rather (...)
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  45. Passing, traveling and reality: Social constructionism and the metaphysics of race.Ron Mallon - 2004 - Noûs 38 (4):644–673.
    Among race theorists, the view that race is a social construction is widespread. While the term ‘ social construction’ is sometimes intended to mean merely that race does not constitute a robust, biological natural kind, it often labels the stronger position that race is real, but not a biological kind. For example, Charles Mills writes that, ‘‘the task of those working on race is to put race in quotes, ‘race’, while still insisting that nevertheless, it exists ’’. It is to (...)
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  46.  48
    A Portable World: The Notebooks of European Travellers (Eighteenth to Nineteenth Centuries).Marie‐Noëlle Bourguet - 2010 - Intellectual History Review 20 (3):377-400.
    For the past three decades, notebooks and note?taking practices have elicited growing interest in various fields of research: anthropology, media and literature studies, history of the book, history of science. In this renewal, however, scientific travelers? notes have not received all the attention they deserve. To be sure, historians of discovery and exploration are used to considering travel diaries and field notes as a principal resource, on the basis of which they can assess a traveler?s accomplishment or document his (...)
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  47.  13
    Minority Writing across Cultures: From 彝 (Yi) Literature to World Literature.Shuo Qiu - 2022 - Cultura 19 (2):87-103.
    Through an analysis of the work of the Yi poets, Aku Wuwu, Jidi Majia, and Jimu Langge, this paper discusses the significance of Yi literature in translation, circulation, and production, with an additional focus on the development of minority literature in the context of world literature. A variety of factors enable the translation of ethnic minority literature, including the content and characteristics of the literature itself, the cultural ideologies and literary values of societies, and the personal motivations of authors and (...)
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  48.  14
    African American Travelers Encounter Greece, ca. 1850–1900.John W. I. Lee - 2022 - American Journal of Philology 143 (4):631-651.
    Abstract:This essay examines the experiences of three 19th-century African American travelers to Greece—David Dorr (1852), Frederick Douglass (1887), and John Wesley Gilbert (1890–1)—using evidence from their letters, diaries, and published writings. The essay shows that although each traveler's unique personal perspective shaped his response to seeing the ancient sites and monuments of Greece, all three men responded most deeply to a site connected with Greece's Christian heritage: the Areopagus or Mars Hill, where according to 19th-century understanding the Apostle Paul (...)
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  49.  30
    Innes M. Keighren; Charles W. J. Withers; Bill Bell. Travels into Print: Exploration, Writing, and Publishing with John Murray, 1773–1859. xiii + 364 pp., illus., figs., apps., bibl., index. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 2015. $45. [REVIEW]Jim Secord - 2016 - Isis 107 (4):853-854.
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  50.  24
    (1 other version)Bertrand Russell's America [review of Barry Feinberg and Ronald Kasrils, eds., Bertrand Russell's America: His Transatlantic Travels and Writings, Vol. 1: 1896-1945 ]. [REVIEW]Lester E. Denonn - 1992 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 12.
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