This book focuses on Iceland as a nineteenth-century utopian locus in the light of racial theories attached to the country’s national framework. In particular, it investigates the ways in which five nineteenth-century travellers define their national identity and gender in relation to Iceland during the Victorian period, during which European nationalism emerges as an idea of paramount importance. Owing to the gradual contemplation of this peripheral word as the cradle of the Germanic nations, Victorian travel writers endeavoured to reconstruct the image of Iceland in accordance with the racial theoretical framework that underlay the nineteenth-century British nation-building agenda.
Author(s): Dimitrios Kassis
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Year: 2016
Language: English
Pages: 158
Acknowledgements vii
Introduction 1
Chapter One. Sir John Barrow Jr: "A Visit to Iceland by way of Tronyem in the 'Flower of Yarrow'" 7
Chapter Two. Ethel Brilliana (Alec) Tweedie: "A Girl’s Ride in Iceland" 49
Chapter Three. Anthony Trollope: "How the 'Mastiffs' went to Iceland" 99
Chapter Four. Frederick Metcalfe: "The Oxonian in Iceland; or Notes of Travel in that Island in the Summer of 1869 with Glances at Icelandic Folklore and Sagas" 115
Chapter Five. Disney Leith: "Iceland: Peeps at Many Lands" 129
Conclusion 137
Bibliography 141