Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/47625
Title: Women travel writers and the question of veracity
Authors: Mulligan , Maureen 
UNESCO Clasification: 57 Lingüística
55 Historia
Issue Date: 2014
Journal: Women, Travel Writing, and Truth
Abstract: Travel writing inevitably raises questions of blurred genres, of how much of what is described in a travel text is fiction, non-fiction, or autobiography, and what the reader can expect from the writer in terms of self-disclosure and truth telling. Debbie Lisle argues, 'travel writing is a form of global politics because it reproduces the same discourses of difference that hold our prevailing understandings of the world in place'. Travellers in earlier times tended to be members of the upper class, or sponsored by the Royal Geographic Society (RGS) which meant it was hard for most women to go far, which makes it more difficult for readers with a sense of history not to be indulgent to modern women who have to get their funding where they can and accept the compromises this implies. Truth, when considered in relation to women's travel writing, is as complex as the genre itself.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/47625
ISBN: 9781317690245
9781138023529
DOI: 10.4324/9781315776361
Source: Women, Travel Writing, and Truth, p. 171-184
Appears in Collections:Capítulo de libro
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