Contemporary British Travel Writing on Italy and British Broadsheets: Tobias Jones, John Hooper and Tim Parks

The objects of analysis here are recent, well-known texts about Italy by authors who work for broadsheet newspapers, and whose work, in turn, is promoted in those same broadsheets for a predominantly middle-class audience interested in, or most likely travelling to, Italy. The article aims to highli...

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Main Author: Kate Willman
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Liverpool University Press 2018-03-01
Series:Modern Languages Open
Online Access:https://www.modernlanguagesopen.org/articles/159
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spelling doaj-85bff00d2dc741e080012b46396c80c32020-11-25T01:13:43ZcatLiverpool University PressModern Languages Open2052-53972018-03-01110.3828/mlo.v0i0.15992Contemporary British Travel Writing on Italy and British Broadsheets: Tobias Jones, John Hooper and Tim ParksKate Willman0University of BristolThe objects of analysis here are recent, well-known texts about Italy by authors who work for broadsheet newspapers, and whose work, in turn, is promoted in those same broadsheets for a predominantly middle-class audience interested in, or most likely travelling to, Italy. The article aims to highlight the dangers of the symbiotic relationship between these texts and the British press, given that they tend to perpetuate over-simplifications and stereotypes about Italy versus Britain that have existed at least since the growth of tourism in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The texts analysed here – 'The Dark Heart of Italy' by Tobias Jones, 'The Italians' by John Hooper and 'Italian Neighbours' and 'An Italian Education' by Tim Parks – were chosen due to their popularity and their authors’ visibility as commentators on Italian issues. These authors tend to display a lack of awareness of (or desire to ignore) their positioning and the ways in which their work often promotes an agenda of northern European superiority that has evolved, but not significantly altered, in the last two hundred years or so. The article reveals an unsettling alliance between these British commentators on Italy and the newspapers that are supposed to provide accurate information on, and may shape policy towards, Italy.https://www.modernlanguagesopen.org/articles/159
collection DOAJ
language Catalan
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kate Willman
spellingShingle Kate Willman
Contemporary British Travel Writing on Italy and British Broadsheets: Tobias Jones, John Hooper and Tim Parks
Modern Languages Open
author_facet Kate Willman
author_sort Kate Willman
title Contemporary British Travel Writing on Italy and British Broadsheets: Tobias Jones, John Hooper and Tim Parks
title_short Contemporary British Travel Writing on Italy and British Broadsheets: Tobias Jones, John Hooper and Tim Parks
title_full Contemporary British Travel Writing on Italy and British Broadsheets: Tobias Jones, John Hooper and Tim Parks
title_fullStr Contemporary British Travel Writing on Italy and British Broadsheets: Tobias Jones, John Hooper and Tim Parks
title_full_unstemmed Contemporary British Travel Writing on Italy and British Broadsheets: Tobias Jones, John Hooper and Tim Parks
title_sort contemporary british travel writing on italy and british broadsheets: tobias jones, john hooper and tim parks
publisher Liverpool University Press
series Modern Languages Open
issn 2052-5397
publishDate 2018-03-01
description The objects of analysis here are recent, well-known texts about Italy by authors who work for broadsheet newspapers, and whose work, in turn, is promoted in those same broadsheets for a predominantly middle-class audience interested in, or most likely travelling to, Italy. The article aims to highlight the dangers of the symbiotic relationship between these texts and the British press, given that they tend to perpetuate over-simplifications and stereotypes about Italy versus Britain that have existed at least since the growth of tourism in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The texts analysed here – 'The Dark Heart of Italy' by Tobias Jones, 'The Italians' by John Hooper and 'Italian Neighbours' and 'An Italian Education' by Tim Parks – were chosen due to their popularity and their authors’ visibility as commentators on Italian issues. These authors tend to display a lack of awareness of (or desire to ignore) their positioning and the ways in which their work often promotes an agenda of northern European superiority that has evolved, but not significantly altered, in the last two hundred years or so. The article reveals an unsettling alliance between these British commentators on Italy and the newspapers that are supposed to provide accurate information on, and may shape policy towards, Italy.
url https://www.modernlanguagesopen.org/articles/159
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