Annotation An extraordinary recovered text. ... Kilcup brings Lorenza Berbineau before readers as a woman, domestic servant, traveler, and diarist, thereby advancing our understanding of all four variables in American cultural studies more broadly." Phyllis Cole, author of Mary Moody Emerson and the Origins of Transcendentalism: A Family HistoryBecause prior studies of American women's travel writing have focused exclusively on middle-class and wealthy travelers, it has been difficult to assess the genre and its participants in a holistic fashion. One of the very few surviving working-class travel diaries, Lorenza Stevens Berbineau's account provides readers with a unique perspective of a domestic servant in the wealthy Lowell family in Boston. Staying in luxurious hotels and caring for her young charge Eddie during her six-month grand tour, Berbineau wrote detailed and insightful entries about the people and places she saw. Contributing to the traditions of women's, diary, and travel literature from the perspective of a domestic servant, Berbineau's narrative reveals an arresting and intimate outlook on both her own life and the activities, places, and people she encounters. For example, she carefully records Europeans' religious practices, working people and their behavior, and each region's aesthetic qualities. Clearly writing in haste and with a pleasing freedom from the constraints of orthographic and stylistic convention, Berbineau offers a distinctive voice and a discerning perspective. Alert to nuances of social class, her narrative is as appealing and informative to today's readers as it no doubt was to her fellow domestics in the Lowell household. Unobtrusively edited to retain as much as possible the individuality and texture of the author's original manuscript, From Beacon Hill to the Crystal Palace offers readers brief framing summaries, informative endnotes, and a valuable introduction that analyzes Berbineau's narrative in relation to gender and class issues and compares it to the published travel writing of her famous contemporary, Harriet Beecher Stowe. Karen Kilcup is professor of American literature, University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Named a U.S. National Distinguished Teacher in 1987, she was recently the Davidson Eminent Scholar Chair at Florida International University. She is the editor of Soft Canons: American Women Writers and Masculine Tradition (University of Iowa, 1999) and Nineteenth-Century American Women Writers: An Anthology and the author of Robert Frost and Feminine Literary Tradition.
Georgi—Finlay argues that Winnemucca's text represents “the collaboration, or . . . dialogue ofvoices, female and male, eastern and western, Indian and white,” although she emphasizes the “collaboration between women of two cultures.
This field-defining work opens the study of world's fairs to women's and gender history, exploring the intersections of masculinity, femininity, exoticism, display, and performance at these influential events.
Exploring Travel and Tourism: Essays on Journeys and Destinations offers a broad treatment of topics in global travel/tourism studies through articles first presented at Travel and Tourism panels at Mid-Atlantic Popular/American Culture ...
See Halttunen, Confidence Men and Painted Women; Boyer, Urban Masses and Moral Order in America, 1820–1920; Howell, “Sex and the City of Bachelors”; Hessinger, Seduced, Abandoned, and Reborn; and Gamber, Boardinghouse in ...
Mobility and Employment in British Travel Writing 1750- 1850 Kathryn Walchester. tourists able to direct their own itinerary, ... How do we perceive touristic sites and experiences when we are working? What does it mean to encounter ...
... From Beacon Hill to the Crystal Palace : The 1851 Travel Diary of a Working - Class Woman , ed . Karen L. Kilcup , Iowa City : University of Iowa Press , 2002 , and Kilcup's " Introduction " . See Jensen , Loosening the Bonds , 45 ...
... From Beacon Hill to the Crystal Palace : The 1851 Travel Diary of a Working - Class Woman . Edited by Karen Kilcup . Iowa City : University of Iowa Press , 2002 . Briggs , Asa . The Age of Improvement , 1783-1867 . London : Longman ...
... From Beacon Hill to the Crystal Palace: The 1851 Travel Diary of a Working-Class Woman (Iowa City, IA: University of Iowa Press, 2002). The novelist Anne Bullard (1808–96) sailed with Henry Ward Beecher on the New World to Liverpool in ...
Each entry in the volume is around 1,000 words, and the style is more essayistic than encyclopaedic, with contributors providing a reflection on their chosen keyword from a variety of disciplinary perspectives.
In Transport policy: Learning lessons from history, ed. C. Divall, J. Hine, and C. Pooley, 171–184. London: Routledge. Lyth, P., and M. Dierikx. 1994. From privilege to popularity the growth of leisure air travel since 1945.