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Women's Travel Writings in Italy, Part II

Betty Hagglund Jennie Batchelor Donatella Badin Catherine Dille

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English
Pickering & Chatto (Publishers) Ltd
01 April 2010
Chawton House Library: Women's Travel Writings are multi-volume editions with full texts reproduced in facsimile with new scholarly apparatus. The texts have been carefully selected to illustrate various themes in women's history.

By:  
Edited by:  
Volume editor:   , ,
Imprint:   Pickering & Chatto (Publishers) Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   4.445kg
ISBN:   9781851969876
ISBN 10:   185196987X
Series:   Chawton House Library: Women's Travel Writings
Pages:   2256
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Mixed media product
Publisher's Status:   Active
Part II Volume 5 Maria Graham, Three Months Passed in the Mountains East of Rome (1820) In 1819, the Englishwoman Maria Graham spent three months in the mountains east of Rome. Already an established travel writer, Graham was keen to see parts of Italy that did not form part of the established tourist trail and to observe the local villagers whom she described as having 'manners and habits [which] savour of an older world'. Much of the book is devoted to descriptions and drawings of a troupe of local bandits whom Graham regarded as romantic heroes but who eventually drove the party back to Rome. Volumes 6-7 Lady Morgan, Italy (1821) Sydney Owenson's, alias Lady Morgan, travelogue is a landmark of empathy for a post- Napoleonic Italy in the throes of repression. It is full of anecdotes as well as of sweeping political statements about Italian history and society, England's role in Restoration Europe, and her own situation as a woman traveller with Jacobin sympathies. The Quarterly Review described it as 'a series of offences against good morals, good politics, good sense, and good taste' and it was censured by the King of Sardinia, the Emperor of Austria, and the Pope. Nevertheless it made her famous, earning Byron's praise for its radicalism, and was used by generations of Anglophone visitors as a stimulating guidebook. Volumes 8-9 Harriet Morton, Protestant Vigils, or Evening Records of a Journey in Italy (1829) Morton gives a glimpse into the world of a middle-class English Protestant traveller in southern Europe, struggling to reconcile the architectural and artistic beauties of the scenes before her with her deeply-held anti-Catholic prejudices.

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