Emma Robinson-Tomsett
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Scrutiny and sociability
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Communal leisure activities were organized to relieve monotony, to provide an outlet for journeyers' energy and to facilitate sociability. The dramatic increase in the variety and sophistication of these activities, particularly on maritime journeys, was one of the greatest changes in the journey between 1870 and 1940. The journey's conditions and environment redefined the gaze as primarily the perception of people instead of objects: as one study usefully highlights, the nineteenth-century British train compartment 'was the site of intense if oblique mutual scrutiny. It produced a situation of anonymous promiscuity increasingly typical of modern life in which visual impressions were the prime means of reading others.' Warnings in journey etiquette literature about the attention paid to women's behaviour by other journeyers indicate that those upon whom women gazed so fiercely subjected them to similar scrutiny.

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Women, travel and identity

Journeys by rail and sea, 1870–1940

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