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Journal ArticleDOI

The Tourist Gaze in the Spanish Civil War: Agnes Hodgson Between Surgery and Spectacle

Jane Hanley
- 01 Dec 2016 - 
- Vol. 43, Iss: 1, pp 196-219
TLDR
This paper used a tourist gaze to frame parts of her journey, a strategy also employed by Australians in earlier conflicts, revealing aspects of wartime leisure while providing an alternative model for reconciling traumatic experiences.
Abstract
International volunteers in the Spanish Civil War negotiated fraught aspects of modernity, including links between technology and violence, the ethics of transnational engagement, and the interconnection between national identity and changing roles for women. To understand their experiences they drew on existing knowledge of Spain and a range of interpretive frameworks available to understand their life in war. Agnes Hodgson was an Australian nurse who volunteered for the Republicans. Her experiences, recorded in her diary, reflect neither the politically committed volunteer’s disillusionment nor the romance of war as confirmation of masculinity present in other narratives. Hodgson uses a tourist gaze to frame parts of her journey, a strategy also employed by Australians in earlier conflicts. Tourism in war reveals aspects of wartime leisure while providing an alternative model for reconciling traumatic experiences. The fusion of the genre of war testimony, which fundamentally relates change, with the genre of travel narrative, which traditionally projects stasis, disrupts the prevailing tropes of both genres.

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United States Communist History Bibliography 2016, and a Selective Bibliography of Non-U.S. Communism and Communism-Related Theory

TL;DR: The principal subject of this annual bibliography is the English language scholarly literature of American Communism (supplemented by the occasional article from serious journals of opinion, obitua... as discussed by the authors ).
Dissertation

The Worldmaking Role of Sri Lankan Travel Writers: Negotiating Structure and Agency in the Study of Travel Representations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present three distinctive ways locally produced travel writing in English represents Sri Lanka within tourism promotion, journalism, and finally through the perspective of independent local travellers using the Bourdieusian field of cultural production, which is built upon the premise that worldmaking representations are contingent not so much upon initiation or illusion but "inculcation".
References
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Journal Article

Reading Autobiography: A Guide for Interpreting Life Narratives

TL;DR: Autobiographical writing is redefining the meaning of narrative, as the recent explosion of memoirs by writers such as Frank McCourt, Mary Karr, Dave Eggers, and Kathryn Harrison suggests as discussed by the authors.
Book

To Try Her Fortune in London: Australian Women, Colonialism, and Modernity

TL;DR: Woolacott et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the connections between whitens, colonial status, gender and modernity through the lens of Australian women who migrated to London, their imperial metropolis and the center of the publishing, art, theatrical, and educational worlds.
Book

Duty Free: Australian Women Abroad

Ros Pesman
TL;DR: Pesman as mentioned in this paper analyzes the different needs and expectations of Australian women of all types and generations, and argues that Europe - Britian in particular - seemed to promise a kind of "finish" or sophistication they could not attain in Australia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender and War The Effects of Armed Conflict on Women's Health and Mental Health

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of armed conflict on women and women's greater vulnerability to health and mental health concerns because in war, women's bodies become a battleground are discussed. But women are disproportionately disadvantaged in terms of personal safety, access to resources, and human rights.