Constructing the Global Irish Woman Traveller: Cynthia Longfield’s Scientific Researches in South America, 1921-27

Irish-born Cynthia Longfield (1896-1991) became a leading entomologist after participating in three expeditions to South America in the 1920s. Working unpaid in the British Museum for 30 years, she catalogued Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) from all over the world, published scientific papers,...

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Main Author: Angela Byrne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Associação Brasileira de Estudos Irlandeses 2020-05-01
Series:ABEI Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.fflch.usp.br/abei/article/view/3812
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spelling doaj-0948bee8dc8843ca98fc62fe72a8adcd2020-11-25T02:48:09ZengAssociação Brasileira de Estudos IrlandesesABEI Journal1518-05812595-81272020-05-01212273610.37389/abei.v21i2.38122905Constructing the Global Irish Woman Traveller: Cynthia Longfield’s Scientific Researches in South America, 1921-27Angela ByrneIrish-born Cynthia Longfield (1896-1991) became a leading entomologist after participating in three expeditions to South America in the 1920s. Working unpaid in the British Museum for 30 years, she catalogued Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) from all over the world, published scientific papers, and collaborated with British, Irish and international scientists. While she made several other collecting expeditions to Africa and South-East Asia in the 1920s and 1930s, her early experiences of South American natural history are a crucial aspect of her formation as an internationally renowned scientist, and are an interesting chapter in the long history of Irish connections with the region. She was a migrant, a traveller, and a scientist, and was a person at once privileged by her class and denied basic equalities due to her gender. This article firstly considers her scientific career in the context of Irish women’s migration in the first half of the twentieth century, before focusing on her three voyages to South America in 1921-7 and, finally, examining the ways in which her participation in the St George expedition– as one of just three women aboard ship – was reported in the Anglophone press.http://revistas.fflch.usp.br/abei/article/view/3812science; travel; women; migration.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angela Byrne
spellingShingle Angela Byrne
Constructing the Global Irish Woman Traveller: Cynthia Longfield’s Scientific Researches in South America, 1921-27
ABEI Journal
science; travel; women; migration.
author_facet Angela Byrne
author_sort Angela Byrne
title Constructing the Global Irish Woman Traveller: Cynthia Longfield’s Scientific Researches in South America, 1921-27
title_short Constructing the Global Irish Woman Traveller: Cynthia Longfield’s Scientific Researches in South America, 1921-27
title_full Constructing the Global Irish Woman Traveller: Cynthia Longfield’s Scientific Researches in South America, 1921-27
title_fullStr Constructing the Global Irish Woman Traveller: Cynthia Longfield’s Scientific Researches in South America, 1921-27
title_full_unstemmed Constructing the Global Irish Woman Traveller: Cynthia Longfield’s Scientific Researches in South America, 1921-27
title_sort constructing the global irish woman traveller: cynthia longfield’s scientific researches in south america, 1921-27
publisher Associação Brasileira de Estudos Irlandeses
series ABEI Journal
issn 1518-0581
2595-8127
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Irish-born Cynthia Longfield (1896-1991) became a leading entomologist after participating in three expeditions to South America in the 1920s. Working unpaid in the British Museum for 30 years, she catalogued Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) from all over the world, published scientific papers, and collaborated with British, Irish and international scientists. While she made several other collecting expeditions to Africa and South-East Asia in the 1920s and 1930s, her early experiences of South American natural history are a crucial aspect of her formation as an internationally renowned scientist, and are an interesting chapter in the long history of Irish connections with the region. She was a migrant, a traveller, and a scientist, and was a person at once privileged by her class and denied basic equalities due to her gender. This article firstly considers her scientific career in the context of Irish women’s migration in the first half of the twentieth century, before focusing on her three voyages to South America in 1921-7 and, finally, examining the ways in which her participation in the St George expedition– as one of just three women aboard ship – was reported in the Anglophone press.
topic science; travel; women; migration.
url http://revistas.fflch.usp.br/abei/article/view/3812
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