Victorian travelers and the opening of China, 1842-1907
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Author
Publication
1999 - Ohio University Perss, Athens, Ohio
Language
English
Word Count
63,250 words, Guess
Page Count
253 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL381359M
- ISBN-10082141268X
- OCLC Control Number40331095
- OCLC Control Numbervictoriantravele0000thur
- Library of Congress Control Number98043661
and 2 more
- Goodreads490064
- LibraryThing4445074
Classifications
- DDC915.104/35
- LCCDS709 .T49 1999
Description
Three men and three women - a plant collector, a merchant and his novelist wife, a military officer, and two famous women travelers - went to China between the Opium War and the formal end of the Opium trade, 1842-1907. Their travel records and novels became a significant source of many of the West's impressions of that far-off land. All of the writers had a degree of contemporary importance or fame and represented different views that lent significance to their writing about China. Robert Fortune, a horticulturalist, and Archibald Little, a merchant, represent travel and the business of empire. Constance Gordon Cumming, Henry Knollys, and Isabella Bird Bishop were adventure travelers. Alicia Little, wife and novelist, helpmeet and humanitarian, was a woman of empire. Susan Schoenbauer Thurin's study of these writings presents a rich tapestry of impressions, biases, and cultural perspectives that inform our own understanding of the Victorians and their views of the world outside their own.
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