Emma Robinson-Tomsett
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Introduction
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This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this book. This book focuses upon rail and marine journeys as the most significant and representative female journey experience prior to 1940. By framing the journey abroad as a leisure opportunity, it adds a new dimension to the history of women's leisure. It moves beyond previous studies' focus on women's late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century local and home-based activities, such as visits to music and dance halls, the cinema and women's clubs, and music making, knitting and gossiping with friends at home. By focusing upon women's journeys, the book further challenges the traditional assumption, which some date back to the age of Gilgamesh, that journeying is a masculine endeavour. Women enthusiastically and actively constructed, defined and consumed their journeys and asserted their identities as journeyers throughout this period.

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Women, travel and identity

Journeys by rail and sea, 1870–1940

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