Emma Robinson-Tomsett
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Full of wickedness
Romantic opportunity and sexual hazard?
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By the 1880s travel within foreign countries had become broadly connected in the popular imagination with love affairs: many novels and short stories featuring romance were set overseas. As the journey was an act of travel, it, too, was perceived as a site of romance. The belief that journey spaces offered liberation from convention led to some fictional romances occurring across socio-economic divisions. The journey was also depicted as a space for the negative consequences of love. The understanding of journey spaces as enclosed, contained and private fuelled the belief that, in addition to love, sexual desire could be explored within them, which was again reinforced by some fiction. In absolute contrast to the belief that it was a space for either affairs of the heart or eroticism to flourish, the journey abroad was often represented as an arena in which women were threatened with physical and sexual danger.

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Women, travel and identity

Journeys by rail and sea, 1870–1940

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