Inhospitalidad, colonialismo y género en Over the Pyrenees into Spain de Mary Eyre

Citació

  • Gifra-Adroher, P. Inhospitalidad, colonialismo y género en Over the Pyrenees into Spain de Mary Eyre. Rassegna iberistica. 2025;48(123):107-26. DOI: 10.30687/Ri/2037-6588/2025/24/006

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Descripció

  • Resum

    This article analyses the representation of Spain as an inhospitable country in Mary Eyre's Over the Pyrenees into Spain, a bitter narrative of the solitary journey that this neglected Victorian writer pursued across parts of the Peninsula during the summer of 1865. Drawing on diverse approaches to hospitality and inhospitality, I will argue that Eyre chose to purposely build a negative image of Spain by blending the two main ideologies that, according to Sara Mills, influenced Victorian women's travel books, namely, the discourse of colonialism and the discourse of gender. Eyre, who during her journey was harassed and insulted by her triple status of woman, foreigner and solo traveller, used her narrative to ultimately take revenge and describe the country in a way no other Victorian travellers had done before.
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