Travel writing and the renegotiation of the English landscape, 1760-1800
In this paper it is illustrated that late eighteenth-century English travel guidebook writers promoted idyllic rural landscapes that met or were created to meet picturesque tastes while concurrently advocating the alteration of regional landscapes by means of agriculture, industry and transportation...
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ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-34322013-06-05T04:17:18ZTravel writing and the renegotiation of the English landscape, 1760-1800Forbes, Lisa CatherineTourism EnglandIn this paper it is illustrated that late eighteenth-century English travel guidebook writers promoted idyllic rural landscapes that met or were created to meet picturesque tastes while concurrently advocating the alteration of regional landscapes by means of agriculture, industry and transportation routes. While the impulses behind nostalgic and developed landscapes are at cross-purposes, both were concepts used by guidebook authors to renegotiate perceptions of their local regions: the former to exhibit regional beauties and marvels by appealing to the prevailing aesthetics, the latter to combat stereotypes of backwardness, reframing regional identities within national trends of development and "improvement." In this way late eighteenth-century travel guidebooks afford an interesting perspective on the rural English landscape of that period and how it was seen, experienced and represented by local promoters.University of British Columbia2009-01-09T17:42:12Z2009-01-09T17:42:12Z20082009-01-09T17:42:12Z2009-05Electronic Thesis or Dissertation431658 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/3432eng |
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English |
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Others
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Tourism England |
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Tourism England Forbes, Lisa Catherine Travel writing and the renegotiation of the English landscape, 1760-1800 |
description |
In this paper it is illustrated that late eighteenth-century English travel guidebook writers promoted idyllic rural landscapes that met or were created to meet picturesque tastes while concurrently advocating the alteration of regional landscapes by means of agriculture, industry and transportation routes. While the impulses behind nostalgic and developed landscapes are at cross-purposes, both were concepts used by guidebook authors to renegotiate perceptions of their local regions: the former to exhibit regional beauties and marvels by appealing to the prevailing aesthetics, the latter to combat stereotypes of backwardness, reframing regional identities within national trends of development and "improvement." In this way late eighteenth-century travel guidebooks afford an interesting perspective on the rural English landscape of that period and how it was seen, experienced and represented by local promoters. |
author |
Forbes, Lisa Catherine |
author_facet |
Forbes, Lisa Catherine |
author_sort |
Forbes, Lisa Catherine |
title |
Travel writing and the renegotiation of the English landscape, 1760-1800 |
title_short |
Travel writing and the renegotiation of the English landscape, 1760-1800 |
title_full |
Travel writing and the renegotiation of the English landscape, 1760-1800 |
title_fullStr |
Travel writing and the renegotiation of the English landscape, 1760-1800 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Travel writing and the renegotiation of the English landscape, 1760-1800 |
title_sort |
travel writing and the renegotiation of the english landscape, 1760-1800 |
publisher |
University of British Columbia |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3432 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT forbeslisacatherine travelwritingandtherenegotiationoftheenglishlandscape17601800 |
_version_ |
1716586904812519424 |