Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journals of Scotland: The Creation of the Romantic Author

The increase in popularity of the Home Tour in the 19th century and the publication of many journals, diaries, and guides of tours of Scotland by, such as, Samuel Johnson and James Boswell, led to the perception of Scotland as a literary tour destination. The tour of Scotland invariably resulted in...

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Main Author: Gillian Beattie-Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Silesia Press 2021-06-01
Series:Postscriptum Polonistyczne
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/PPol/article/view/10304
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spelling doaj-410d92721e9041a8a67ff262dc911cf82021-09-15T12:33:07ZengUniversity of Silesia PressPostscriptum Polonistyczne1898-15932353-98442021-06-0127110.31261/https://doi.org/10.31261/PS_P.2021.27.03Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journals of Scotland: The Creation of the Romantic AuthorGillian Beattie-Smith0The Open University: Milton Keynes, GB The increase in popularity of the Home Tour in the 19th century and the publication of many journals, diaries, and guides of tours of Scotland by, such as, Samuel Johnson and James Boswell, led to the perception of Scotland as a literary tour destination. The tour of Scotland invariably resulted in a journal in which identities such as writer, traveller, observer, were created. The text became a location for the pursuit of a sense of place and identity. For women in particular, the text offered opportunities to be accepted as a writer and commentator. Dorothy Wordsworth made two journeys to Scotland: the first, in 1803, with William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and the second, in 1822 with Joanna Hutchinson, the sister of Mary, her brother’s wife. This paper considers Dorothy’s identity constructed in those Scottish journals. Discussions of Dorothy Wordsworth have tended to consider her identity through familial relationship, and those of her writing by what is lacking in her work. Indeed, her work and her writing are frequently subsumed into the plural of ‘the Wordsworths’. This paper considers the creation of individual self in her work, and discusses the social and spatial construction of identity in Dorothy’s discourse in her journals about Scotland. https://www.journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/PPol/article/view/10304Dorothy Wordsworthwomen’s travel writingwalking, identityScotland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gillian Beattie-Smith
spellingShingle Gillian Beattie-Smith
Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journals of Scotland: The Creation of the Romantic Author
Postscriptum Polonistyczne
Dorothy Wordsworth
women’s travel writing
walking, identity
Scotland
author_facet Gillian Beattie-Smith
author_sort Gillian Beattie-Smith
title Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journals of Scotland: The Creation of the Romantic Author
title_short Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journals of Scotland: The Creation of the Romantic Author
title_full Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journals of Scotland: The Creation of the Romantic Author
title_fullStr Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journals of Scotland: The Creation of the Romantic Author
title_full_unstemmed Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journals of Scotland: The Creation of the Romantic Author
title_sort dorothy wordsworth’s journals of scotland: the creation of the romantic author
publisher University of Silesia Press
series Postscriptum Polonistyczne
issn 1898-1593
2353-9844
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The increase in popularity of the Home Tour in the 19th century and the publication of many journals, diaries, and guides of tours of Scotland by, such as, Samuel Johnson and James Boswell, led to the perception of Scotland as a literary tour destination. The tour of Scotland invariably resulted in a journal in which identities such as writer, traveller, observer, were created. The text became a location for the pursuit of a sense of place and identity. For women in particular, the text offered opportunities to be accepted as a writer and commentator. Dorothy Wordsworth made two journeys to Scotland: the first, in 1803, with William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and the second, in 1822 with Joanna Hutchinson, the sister of Mary, her brother’s wife. This paper considers Dorothy’s identity constructed in those Scottish journals. Discussions of Dorothy Wordsworth have tended to consider her identity through familial relationship, and those of her writing by what is lacking in her work. Indeed, her work and her writing are frequently subsumed into the plural of ‘the Wordsworths’. This paper considers the creation of individual self in her work, and discusses the social and spatial construction of identity in Dorothy’s discourse in her journals about Scotland.
topic Dorothy Wordsworth
women’s travel writing
walking, identity
Scotland
url https://www.journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/PPol/article/view/10304
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