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8 Mobile Culture Studies. The Journal 6 2o20 (Travel)
Birgit Englert, Sandra Vlasta | Travel Writing
In what follows, we begin by briefly discussing travel writing, before moving on to reflect
on travel writing studies, mobility studies, and the relationship between them. After providing
a definition of our understanding of ‘text’ and the ‘visual’, we offer an overview of the themes
and topics covered in the following articles. Work on this issue began under normal conditions;
given the worldwide COVID pandemic, however, our contributors were ultimately forced to
write and revise, and our reviewers forced to evaluate, under difficult circumstances — circum-
stances that we clearly wish to acknowledge. Although we were all heavily affected by these
events, given the real-time nature of the pandemic, they could not be dealt with from a critical
point of view in the present articles.
Travel writing and travel writing studies
Written documents about travel make up one of the oldest literary genres, the roots of which
date back to antiquity. People record their experiences of journeys for different reasons: some
aim to provide a resource for other travellers, for instance, while others seek to teach and enter-
tain, perhaps even intending their travelogues to serve as a form of autobiography. Throughout
the long history of the genre, travelogues have been popular with readers, particularly in certain
periods, for instance toward the end of the eighteenth and well into the nineteenth century.
The various accounts of travels and experiences of mobility differ greatly with regard to
style (from scientific reports to amusing anecdotes), form (from letters to diaries and longer
narrative forms, with or without illustrations), and media (from written documents to blogs and
films). Differences can also be identified with regard to their production (during the journey or
afterwards, immediately following the trip or many years later) and to their reception (in short
but regular form in journals or blogs, as a longer project, read in preparation for a journey or for
entertainment, perceived as part of an author’s oeuvre or as a single text).
The genre has evolved over time: as earlier travelogues had the added function of serving
as guidebooks for other travellers, they had a more scientific and encyclopaedic character and
focused on the collection of facts and knowledge. From about the second half of the eighteenth
century (exceptions prove the rule), travellers and their impressions on the journey came to the
fore. The increased possibility of travel due to improved infrastructure and lower costs from the
late eighteenth century onward also enabled more members of the middle class to undertake
journeys; among them were an increasing number of writers, who would then write about their
experiences. The growing popularity of travel writing, together with the increased number of
travel writing publications, meant that authors were increasingly compelled to develop their
own individual approaches to the genre in terms of both form and content. The use of images
is one way to render one’s travelogue unique and, at the same time, to underscore its subjecti-
vity: the ubiquity of terms such as ‘pictures’, ‘sketches’, and ‘impressions’ in the titles mentioned
above signals the particular, personal approach taken in such texts (even though the texts them-
selves often contained images and views that would have been familiar to readers, included to
satisfy their expectations). With that said, images can also be used to convey authenticity, and
thus to claim objectivity — the idea that what I experienced was really as I described it — rather
than individuality.
The contributions to this issue aim to analyse the different forms and functions of images
in travel writing and their relation to the text. In so doing, the supposed claims of the images
>mcs_lab>
Mobile Culture Studies, Band 2/2020
The Journal
- Titel
- >mcs_lab>
- Untertitel
- Mobile Culture Studies
- Band
- 2/2020
- Herausgeber
- Karl Franzens University Graz
- Ort
- Graz
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- deutsch, englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 270
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Mobile Culture Studies The Journal