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Women’s Orients: English Women and the Middle East, 1718–1918
The Eighteenth-Century Harem (1717–89): Lady Montagu, Lady Craven and the Genealogy of Comparative ‘Morals’
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Author(s):
Billie Melman
Publication date
(Print):
1992
Publisher:
Palgrave Macmillan UK
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19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
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Les lettres turques de Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
Michèle Plaisant
(1983)
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Femme et Philosophe: Enlightenment Origins of Feminism
Katherine B. Clinton
(1975)
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Book Chapter
Publication date (Print):
1992
Pages
: 77-98
DOI:
10.1007/978-1-349-10157-3_4
SO-VID:
31df5080-f36d-4a21-8a4e-3e48ee699231
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Book chapters
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 25
A Prosopography of Travel, 1763–1914
pp. 59
Harem Literature, 1763–1914: Tradition and Innovation
pp. 77
The Eighteenth-Century Harem (1717–89): Lady Montagu, Lady Craven and the Genealogy of Comparative ‘Morals’
pp. 99
Exorcising Sheherezad: The Victorians and the Harem
pp. 137
The Haremlik as a Bourgeois Home: Autonomy, Community and Solidarity
pp. 165
Evangelical Travel and the Evangelical Construction of Gender
pp. 175
The Women of Christ Church: Work, Literature and Community in Nineteenth-Century Jerusalem
pp. 191
‘Domestic Life in Palestine’: Evangelical Ethnography — Faith and Prejudice
pp. 210
Feminising the Landscape
pp. 235
Harriet Martineau’s Anti-Pilgrimage: Autobiography, History and Landscape
pp. 254
Queen Hatasu’s Beard: Amelia Edwards, the Scientific Journey and the Emergence of the First Female ‘Orientalists’
pp. 276
An ‘Orientalist’ Couple: Anne Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt and the Pilgrimage to Najd
pp. 306
Conclusion
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