Editorial Macmillan
Fecha de edición junio 2010
Idioma inglés
EAN 9780330448734
400 páginas
Libro
encuadernado en tapa blanda
A marvellous romp through a hundred years of Victorian tourism on the continent
I remember being much amused last year, when landing at Calais,' wrote Mrs Frances Trollope in her 1835 book, Paris and the Parisians, at the answer made by an old traveller to a novice making his first voyage. What a dreadful smell! said the uninitiated stranger it is the smell of the continent, sir! replied the man of experience. And so it was.'
Historians James Munson and Richard Mullen examine just what it was about the smell of the continent that so attracted British travellers in the hundred years from the fall of Napoleon to the outbreak of the First World War. It was the first time in history that the British, en masse, set out to discover Europe. Drawing on contemporary accounts, diaries and letters, Munson and Mullen offer a compelling portrait of the Victorians abroad, many of them convinced that their country was not only vastly superior but also the envy of the world.
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