Results for ' Travelers' writings, American'

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  1.  9
    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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  2.  7
    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 travel writing (...)
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  3.  11
    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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  4.  20
    Writing Mexico: Travel and Intercultural Encounter in Contemporary American Literature.Elisabeth Mermann-Jozwiak - 2009 - Symploke 17 (1-2):95-114.
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  5.  17
    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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  6.  26
    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.??? (...)
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  7.  5
    " 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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  8.  7
    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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  9.  8
    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 of (...)
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  10. Surviving american culture: On Chuck palahniuk.Eduardo Mendieta - 2005 - Philosophy and Literature 29 (2):394-408.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Surviving American Culture:On Chuck PalahniukEduardo MendietaIn an age in which American culture has become the United States' number one export, along with its weapons, low intensity conflict, carcinogenic cigarettes, its "freedom," and pornography, it is delightful and even a sign of hope that there are writers who have taken on the delicate and perilous task of offering a prognosis of what ails this culture. In the following (...)
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  11.  6
    Mary Livermore and My Story of the War: A nurse’s narrative journey.Ana Choperena - 2022 - Nursing Inquiry 29 (2):e12423.
    Mary Livermore'sMy Story of the Waris a valuable piece of travel writing written from the point of view of a nurse who documented her unexpected personal and professional journey to administer the Sanitary Commission of the United States Union Army and provide nursing care during the American Civil War. Although Livermore's pre‐war background had not been solely limited to the domestic sphere, her wartime experience involved a public negotiation between the traditional domestic realm assigned to women and new nursing (...)
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  12.  14
    Bigots or Informed Observers? A Periodization of Pre-Colonial English and European Writing on the Middle EastFrom the Rising of the Sun: English Images of the Ottoman Empire to 1715Enlightened Observers: British Travellers to the Near East 1715-1850The Humanist as Traveler: George Sandys' Relation of a Journey Begun An. Dom. 1610Turkey Romanticized: Images of the Turks in Early 19th-Century English Travel Literature. [REVIEW]Rhoads Murphey, Brandon H. Beck, Anita Damiani, Jonathan Haynes & Reinhold Schiffer - 1990 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 110 (2):291.
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  13.  53
    Nancy Prince's Utopias: Reimagining the African American Utopian Tradition.Amber Foster - 2013 - Utopian Studies 24 (2):329-348.
    Nancy Gardner Prince began writing and self-publishing A Narrative of the Life and Travels of Mrs. Nancy Prince in the 1850s, at a time when few African American women had the ability to do so. Her story tells of diaspora and of the systematic economic, cultural, and political oppression of free African Americans in the antebellum North. Raised by a mother unable to cope with the economic and emotional burden of raising eight children on her own, Prince spends much (...)
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  14.  15
    Benjamin Mays’s The Negro’s God: Recovering a Theological Tradition for an American Freedom Movement.Sarah Azaransky - 2014 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 34 (2):141-158.
    Benjamin Mays's The Negro's God as Reflected in His Literature outlined a tradition of African American God-talk from the eighteenth century. Mays identified a black social Christianity, what he called "the ethical approach," that recognized why oppressed people "emphasize the justice of God." In doing so, he hoped the book would motivate a new kind of politically informed black religious leadership. In the midst of writing The Negro's God, Mays traveled to India. This essay examines how the Indian independence (...)
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  15. City Sense and City Design: Writings and Projects of Kevin Lynch.Kevin Lynch - 1995 - MIT Press.
    Kevin Lynch's books are the classic underpinnings of modern urban planning and design, yet they are only a part of his rich legacy of ideas about human purposes and values in built form. City Sense and City Design brings together Lynch's remaining work, including professional design and planning projects that show how he translated many of his ideas and theories into practice. An invaluable sourcebook of design knowledge, City Sense and City Design completes the record of one of the foremost (...)
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  16.  52
    Time, Money, and Race: Simone de Beauvoir on American Abstraction.Shannon M. Mussett - 2020 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 28 (2).
    In 1947, Simone de Beauvoir traveled to the United States for a four-month stay, during which she toured the country extensively. Her copious notes taken during this time eventually became the travelogue, America Day by Day as well as a piece written for the May 25, 1947 edition of the New York Times Magazine, “An Existentialist Looks at Americans.” In both of these writings, Beauvoir offers an astute criticism of American culture from a foreign perspective. This paper explores Beauvoir’s (...)
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  17.  8
    The Names Alive Are Like the Names in Graves: Black Life and Black Social Death in Terrance Hayes's American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin.Lee Spinks - 2023 - Intertexts 27 (1):60-80.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Names Alive Are Like the Names in GravesBlack Life and Black Social Death in Terrance Hayes's American Sonnets for My Past and Future AssassinLee Spinks"After blackness was invented / people began seeing ghosts."1One of the most powerful and provoking responses to the political rise of Donald Trump appeared with the 2018 publication of Terrance Hayes's American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin. Hayes began writing (...)
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  18.  6
    Violent Inheritance: Sexuality, Land, and Energy in Making the North American West.Nathan Stormer - 2023 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 56 (2):199-205.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Violent Inheritance: Sexuality, Land, and Energy in Making the North American West by E. CramNathan StormerViolent Inheritance: Sexuality, Land, and Energy in Making the North American West. By E. Cram. Oakland: University of California Press, 2022. 292 pp. Cloth $85.00, paper $34.95. ISBN: 0520379470.E. Cram’s Violent Inheritance is an exceptional work that presents a distinctive synthesis of queer, decolonial, and mixed-method scholarship. The goal of the (...)
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  19.  10
    Black Deconstruction: Russell Atkins and the Reconstruction of African-American Criticism.Aldon Lynn Nielsen - 1996 - Diacritics 26 (3/4):86-103.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Black Deconstruction: Russell Atkins and the Reconstruction of African-American CriticismAldon Lynn Nielsen (bio)“What does that signify?” “It don’t signify nothin’ Mr. Warner.”—Russell Atkins, MaleficiumThere are, everywhere unheard (as one might see deep in an electron microscope) rigidities violently breaking—Russell Atkins, WhicheverCritical debates about the applicability of recent literary theories to the reading of African-American writing have often been marked by curious lacunae. Despite the rapid proliferation of (...)
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  20.  12
    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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  21. Imperial Therapy: Mark Twain and the Discourse of National Consciousness in Innocents Abroad.Daniel McKay - 2006 - Colloquy 11:164-77.
    “It may be thought that I am prejudiced. Perhaps I am. I would be ashamed of myself if I were not.” 1 When Mark Twain undertook correspondence for San Francisco’s Alta California on a $1250 trip to Europe and the Holy Land in 1867 he had an established reputation as a humorist and was on the cusp of making the transition from journalist to author. Innocents Abroad, “an unvarnished tale” 2 published in 1869 and sewn together with questionable regard for (...)
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  22.  19
    Escritos de viagem, a religião e a invenção do outro: representando identidade em "floresta das maravilhas".Davi Silva Gonçalves - 2016 - Revista de Teologia 10 (17):140-153.
    The purpose of this article is to analyse how the background knowledge of travellers from the Old World have determined how they would experience American space. Such knowledge is more specifically directed in my study towards religion and politics, as my analysis intends to scrutinise how such realms made – and still make – subjects get to questionable conclusions since both Christianity and capitalism have had the normative tradition of disregarding the possibility of any meanings to deviate from their (...)
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  23.  63
    The ultimate "other": Post-colonialism and Alexander Von humboldt's ecological relationship with nature.Aaron Sachs - 2003 - History and Theory 42 (4):111–135.
    This article is a meditation on the overlaps between environmentalism, post-colonial theory, and the practice of history. It takes as a case study the writings of the explorer-scientist-abolitionist Alexander von Humboldt , the founder of a humane, socially conscious ecology. The post-colonial critique has provided a necessary corrective to the global environmental movement, by focusing it on enduring colonialist power dynamics, but at the same time it has crippled the field of environmental history, by dooming us to a model of (...)
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  24. Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel Writing 1770-1840: From an Antique Land.Nigel Leask - 2004 - 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 the period.
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  25.  3
    Ethics of description: the anthropological dispositif and French modern travel writing.Matt Reeck - 2023 - 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 ambivalent (...)
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  26. John Dewey's Experience in China (1919-1921).Shane J. Ralston - 2019 - Journal of East China Normal University (Educational Sciences) 37 (2):59-62.
    The American philosopher John Dewey is probably best known for his contributions to educational philosophy, though his writings on logic, metaphysics, epistemology and value theory are for the most part equally impressive. Before and after his death in 1952, he was lauded as “America’s philosopher” and a “public intellectual for the twentieth century.” During the early 1920s, to call Dewey an internationalist would be to state the obvious. He had travelled to Japan, Russia, Mexico, Turkey and China. Of all (...)
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  27.  16
    The riḥla and Self-Reinvention of Abū Bakr Ibn al-ʿArabī.Kenneth Garden - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 135 (1):1.
    The Andalusi Abū Bakr Ibn al-ʿArabī, one of the great figures of the Mālikī tradition, gained his scholarly credentials through a journey to seek knowledge in the East. He commemorated his journey in a travelogue so widely admired that it initiated a new genre of Arabic travel writing. This article examines both the journey and the travelogue as strategies Abū Bakr employed to regain his family’s elite status and property, both lost when the Almoravids overthrew the ṭāʾifa of Seville that (...)
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  28.  20
    A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers.Henry David Thoreau - 1893 - Courier Corporation.
    Based on an 1839 boat trip Thoreau took with his brother from Concord, Massachusetts, to Concord, New Hampshire, and back, this classic of American literature is not only a vivid narrative of that journey, it is also a collection of thought-provoking observations on such diverse topics as poetry, literature and philosophy, Native American and Puritan histories of New England, friendship, sacred Eastern writings, traditional Christianity, and much more. Written, like Walden, while Thoreau lived at Walden Pond, and published (...)
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  29.  22
    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 narrative (...)
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  30. What the social text affair does and does not prove.Alan Sokal - manuscript
    I did not write this work merely with the aim of setting the exegetical record straight. My larger target is those contemporaries who -- in repeated acts of wish-fulfillment -- have appropriated conclusions from the philosophy of science and put them to work in aid of a variety of social cum political causes for which those conclusions are ill adapted. Feminists, religious apologists (including ``creation scientists''), counterculturalists, neoconservatives, and a host of other curious fellow-travelers have claimed to find crucial grist (...)
     
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  31. Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel Writing 1770-1840: From an Antique Land.Nigel Leask - 2002 - Oxford University Press UK.
    The decades between 1770 and 1840 are rich in exotic accounts of the ruin-strewn landscapes of Ethiopia, Egypt, India, and Mexico. Yet it is a field which has been neglected by scholars and which - unjustifiably - remains outside the literary canon. In this pioneering book, Nigel Leask studies the Romantic obsession with these 'antique lands', drawing generously on a wide range of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century travel books, as well as on recent scholarship in literature, history, geography, and anthropology. Viewing (...)
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  32.  18
    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 travelogues will (...)
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  33.  8
    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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  34.  16
    Dissonant notes, intrepid explorers: a reading of Angola and the River Congo, by Joachim John Monteiro, between ecology and violence.Pedro Lopes de Almeida - 2018 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 12 (4).
    Over the course of the 19th century, several campaigns in African territories led by white European or North-American scientists, explorers, entrepreneurs, or military officials have been transposed into travelogues where different stages of imperialism and colonialist presences are portrayed. While most of the approaches to these writings tend to favor a post-colonial framework for the interpretation of the interactions depicted there, it is also possible to employ a critical apparatus modeled after the recent developments in the field of the (...)
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  35.  8
    A search in secret India.Paul Brunton - 1934 - London, New York,: Rider.
    2010 Reprint of 1935 American Edition. Illustrated Edition. Paul Brunton (1898 - 1981) was a British philosopher, mystic, traveler, and guru. He left a journalistic career to live among yogis, mystics, and holy men, and studied Eastern and Western esoteric teachings. Dedicating his life to an inward and spiritual quest, Brunton felt charged to communicate his experiences about what he learned in the east to others. His works had a major influence on the spread of Eastern mysticism to the (...)
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  36.  24
    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-.
  37. Books available list.Through Scholarly Personal Narrative Writing - 2013 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 49 (5).
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  38.  5
    Caught up in the spirit!: teaching for womanist liberation.Gary L. Lemons - 2017 - New York: Nova Science Publishers.
    Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Introduction: in the spirit of Zora : traveling with the "eternal feminine" -- Returning to the margin : changed -- African American literature : like a bridge over troubled water -- Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes : envisioning the (new) "Negro artist" -- Striking down colorism in color struck : a play in four scenes -- We are not tragically colored -- Langston Hughes writing about the "the Negro artist and the racial mountain" -- (...)
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  39.  33
    Haunted Journeys: Desire and Transgression in European Travel Writing.Andrea Loselle & Dennis Porter - 1992 - Substance 21 (3):144.
  40.  12
    Forest Recollections: Wandering Monks in Twentieth-Century Thailand (review).Sulak Sivaraksa - 1999 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 19 (1):235-236.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Forest Recollections: Wandering Monks in Twentieth-Century ThailandSulak SivaraksaForest Recollections: Wandering Monks in Twentieth-Century Thailand. By Kamala Tivavanich. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 1997. 410 pp.History and anthropology professors at Cornell University were very impressed with this Ph.D. dissertation written by a student of Southeast Asian history at this prestigious institution. And rightly so, for Forest Recollections is a valuable study of twentieth-century wandering ascetics in northeast Thailand.The author includes (...)
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  41. 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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  42.  21
    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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  43.  7
    The Witness and the Other World: Exotic European Travel Writing, 400-1600Mary B. Campbell.Katharine Park - 1990 - Isis 81 (2):338-339.
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  44.  9
    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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  45.  7
    The witness and the other world: Exotic European travel writing, 400–1600.Dorothy Koenigsberger - 1991 - History of European Ideas 13 (3):286-287.
  46. Colonial Memory: Contemporary Women’s Travel Writing in Britain and the Netherlands.[author unknown] - 2011
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  47.  15
    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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  48.  53
    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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  49. J N MOHANTY (Jiten/Jitendranath) In Memoriam.David Woodruff- Smith & Purushottama Bilimoria - 2023 - Https://Www.Apaonline.Org/Page/Memorial_Minutes2023.
    J. N. (Jitendra Nath) Mohanty (1928–2023). -/- Professor J. N. Mohanty has characterized his life and philosophy as being both “inside” and “outside” East and West, i.e., inside and outside traditions of India and those of the West, living in both India and United States: geographically, culturally, and philosophically; while also traveling the world: Melbourne to Moscow. Most of his academic time was spent teaching at the University of Oklahoma, The New School Graduate Faculty, and finally Temple University. Yet his (...)
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  50.  34
    Social Theory after Strathern: An Introduction.Alice Street & Jacob Copeman - 2014 - Theory, Culture and Society 31 (2-3):7-37.
    Taking its cue from the articles in this special issue, this introduction explores what value a critical engagement with Strathern’s work might have for the social sciences by setting such an engagement in motion. It argues that Strathern’s writings are a particularly fruitful starting point for reflecting on our assumptions about what exactly theory might be and how and where it may be made to travel. Through the juxtaposition of articles published in this special issue and Strathern’s writings on Melanesia (...)
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