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Monday, March 25, 2019

Women Travel Writers :: Gender Femininity Literature Essays

Women Travel Writers After my own presentation, I wanted to dig a little deeper and see how women travel writers were representing reputation in the 18th century. I wondered if the womens descriptions differed far from the men that I analyze in my presentation. I want to focus on Dorothy Wordsworth (Williams sister), Ann Radcliffe and Helen Maria Williams. Im leftover to know if they were guilty of over-representing women in landscape and nature scenes. At the truly end, Ill put in my two cents about the gendering of disposition. First of all, Dorothy Wordsworth traveled with her chum a lot in the early 1800s during this time she kept a journal and wrote, in rich details, about the landscape. Although she wrote predominately with a picturesque tone, she make an effort to pay attention to the sharp, jarring contrasts in nature, like crags, petulant edges, and precipices. William Snyders essay Mother temperaments Other Natures Landscape in Womens Writing, 1770-1830 suggests that it was Dorothys intention to practise the paradoxes in nature to focus on Natures contrast. Snyders source for his theory comes from his underweight readings of Dorothys journals he explains that her language and vocabulary are picturesque, but that she presents Nature in need of disquiet (146). Snyder infers that for Dorothy, maternal care flows out from the human heart, non to it from above or beyond (146). Snyder comments that Dorothy made a point of bring out the irregularities in nature and draws her inspiration on the irony of ordered chaos. Snyder concludes that Dorothy likens Nature to a dress-maker, the female as pattern-maker (148). He suggests that she places emphasis on what the hands, non the breasts, do (148). Snyder also points out that Dorothy usually referred to Nature with the impersonal pronoun it, and non with she or her (147) Snyder believes that Dorothy deliberately overlooks possibilities for maternal symbolism or personification (147). Dorothy does not view maternality with fertility and bounty, but with protection and intimacy (148). However, she does use the maidenly pronoun in some of her works, but Snyder explains that she, the metaphoric woman, is a craftsperson, not a mother (147). Unfortunately Snyders argument does not convince me how can Nature be a pattern-maker while being in need of care? I think the image of pattern-maker indicates originality and creativity, Nature as innovative and refreshing, not Nature in need of help, as Snyder indicates early in his argument.

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