Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Recreating Place: Charles Fothergill and the Limits of Travel Writing

View through CrossRef
In 1806, Charles Fothergill, a young man with a strong interest in natural history, set out on a seven-month tour of Orkney and Shetland. His goal was to write a book about the islands that would emulate the work produced by the earlier traveller Thomas Pennant on Wales and mainland Scotland. Despite his ambition, Fothergill never succeeded in completing his book. His surviving manuscripts, which range from a rough working journal covering one part of his journey to some comments on botany that seem ready to go to press, suggest some of the difficulties that he might have found both in constructing a coherent narrative of his travels and in recreating a version of Pennant’s antiquarian and scientific travels at a time when tastes in travel writing were shifting to focus more on the pleasures of landscape and aesthetics.
Title: Recreating Place: Charles Fothergill and the Limits of Travel Writing
Description:
In 1806, Charles Fothergill, a young man with a strong interest in natural history, set out on a seven-month tour of Orkney and Shetland.
His goal was to write a book about the islands that would emulate the work produced by the earlier traveller Thomas Pennant on Wales and mainland Scotland.
Despite his ambition, Fothergill never succeeded in completing his book.
His surviving manuscripts, which range from a rough working journal covering one part of his journey to some comments on botany that seem ready to go to press, suggest some of the difficulties that he might have found both in constructing a coherent narrative of his travels and in recreating a version of Pennant’s antiquarian and scientific travels at a time when tastes in travel writing were shifting to focus more on the pleasures of landscape and aesthetics.

Related Results

JOHN FOTHERGILL MISIDENTIFIED
JOHN FOTHERGILL MISIDENTIFIED
I read with interest the article by MJ Eadie on men of science and the migraine aura (Hubert Airy, contemporary men of science and the migraine aura. J R Coll Physicians Edinb 2009...
The role of political risk in the travel fair decision-making process
The role of political risk in the travel fair decision-making process
Purpose This paper aims to determine the influence of travel fair selection factors on exhibitor intention to attend, in conjunction with the role of political risk within that rel...
The Contribution of Online and Offline Travel Agent Reservations to Increase Room Occupancy at The Westin Resort Nusa Dua, Bali
The Contribution of Online and Offline Travel Agent Reservations to Increase Room Occupancy at The Westin Resort Nusa Dua, Bali
Purpose: This research focuses on the contribution of room reservations and occupancy. The problem under investigation is to compare the contributions of online and offline travel ...
Analysis of Online and Offline Travel Agents’ Contribution to Room Occupancy
Analysis of Online and Offline Travel Agents’ Contribution to Room Occupancy
ABSTRACT Purpose: The aims of this study are to know the contribution of Online Travel Agents and Offline Travel Agents to room occupancy at a hotel in Denpasar, Bali, Indone...
Risks Management in Travel Business: Peculiarities, Types Criteria of Estimation
Risks Management in Travel Business: Peculiarities, Types Criteria of Estimation
The article considers important issues on the security of travel business as a component of the state’s social and economic system and methods of its impact on risks. The major pur...
The night writer: The emergence of nocturnal travel writing
The night writer: The emergence of nocturnal travel writing
In 1762, the philosopher and writer Jean-Jacques Rousseau wrote in Emile (1979) that we are blind half our lives because of what we miss during the night. The notion that the night...
Everyday Life in the "Tourist Zone"
Everyday Life in the "Tourist Zone"
This article makes a case for the everyday while on tour and argues that the ability to continue with everyday routines and social relationships, while at the same time moving thro...

Back to Top