University Press Copublishing Division / Bucknell University Press
Pages: 426
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-61148-555-4 • Hardback • December 2013 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
978-1-61148-717-6 • Paperback • October 2015 • $68.99 • (£53.00)
978-1-61148-556-1 • eBook • December 2013 • $65.50 • (£50.00)
Jennifer Jenkins Wood is associate professor of Spanish at Scripps College.
List of Illustrations
Notes on Translations
Acknowledgments
Introduction to the History of Spanish Women Travelers
An Overview of Gender and Travel Writing
OneCecilia Böhl de Faber (b. 1796 Morges, Switzerland—d. 1877, Sevilla): On the Therapeutic Value of Travel
TwoCarolina Coronado (b. Almendralejo, 1820?-d. Lisbon, 1911): A Melancholy Traveler ThreeEmilia Serrano, the Baronesa de Wilson (b. Granada, 1833?—d. Barcelona, 1923): The Bard of the Americas
FourRosario de Acuña (b. Madrid, 1850?-d. Gijón, 1923): Spanish Mountain Landscapes
FiveEmilia Pardo Bazán (b. La Coruña,1851-d. Madrid, 1921): Discovering Spain and her Place in the World at the Turn of the Century
SixEva Canel (b. Coana [Asturias], 1857—d. Havana, Cuba, 1932): A Spanish Patriot in the Americas
SevenSofia Pérez de Casanova (b. 1861 or 1862, Almeiras [Galicia], Spain—d. 1958, Poznan, Poland): Poland and Russia through Spanish Eyes
Eight Princess María Eulalia de Borbón (Madrid, 1864-Fuenterrabía, 1958): A Spanish Princess in theAmericas
NineMaría de la Paz Borbón, Princess of Spain and Princess of Bavaria (b. Madrid, 1862 -- d. Munich, 1946): A Royal Pilgrim
TenCarmen de Burgos Seguí (b. Almería, 1867?-d. Madrid, 1932): World Traveler and First Spanish Woman War Correspondent
ElevenSpanish Missionary Nuns in Africa: The First Voyage of the Conceptionist Sisters to Fernando Po (Spanish Guinea), 1884-1885
Bibliography
Primary sources
Secondary sources
About the Author
Index
In this superbly researched investigation, Wood examines 11 Spanish women who traveled during a time when travel was facilitated by ever-improving transportation but was not so easy that it led to mass tourism. The author's subjects are on Cecilia Böhl de Faber (pseudonym Fernán Caballero), Carolina Coronado, Emilia Serrano, Rosario de Acuña, Emilia Pardo Bazán, Eva Canel, Sofía Casanova, Princesses Paz and Eulalia de Borbón, Carmen de Burgos (known as Colombine), and Mother María de Jesús Güell. Wood achieves her goal of acquainting English-speaking readers with these women and their travel narratives by offering translated excerpts of their works, contextualized within a framework of relevant biographical information and accompanied by an image of each traveler. With this volume Wood makes a solid contribution to not only the study of travel literature but also the fields of women's studies, history, and anthropology. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
— Choice Reviews