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dc.contributor.advisorClarke, Clare
dc.contributor.authorDonnelly, Orla Sarah
dc.date.accessioned2025-05-21T08:55:26Z
dc.date.available2025-05-21T08:55:26Z
dc.date.issued2025en
dc.date.submitted2025
dc.identifier.citationDonnelly, Orla Sarah, Always Some New Frontier: Tourism and the Gothic Imagination in Late-Victorian Egyptian-Themed Fiction, Trinity College Dublin, School of English, English, 2025en
dc.identifier.otherYen
dc.descriptionAPPROVEDen
dc.description.abstractThis thesis takes late-Victorian authors of Gothic and Egyptian- themed fiction and studies their imaginative engagement with Egypt as both real-world travellers who wrote about their experiences, or others who wrote about Egypt having never been there (armchair travellers). Grounded in critical perspectives taken from tourism and leisure scholarship, literary, and cultural criticism, this work allows for new insights into an important facet of the Victorian age and of modernity: the rise of tour provider Thomas Cook in the second half of the nineteenth century, and the advent of mass, commercial travel. This thesis argues that the tourist, a relatively new discursive formation, embodies a number of modernity's discontents, from class anxieties to the spread of advanced capitalism as represented in the texts being studied. This thesis also demonstrates how the evolution of European-influenced tourism in Egypt became ripe for Gothic representation by the late-Victorian period. This study takes as its subject matter the imaginative Egyptian themed works of Arthur Conan Doyle, Marie Corelli, Guy Boothby, and William Warner, better known as Cheiro. Each of these authors were mass market literary and cultural forces in their own commercial arenas in an era identified by Kate Flint (2001) as intensely preoccupied over the reading habits of a nation now consuming fiction in mass numbers. Less attention has been paid in scholarship of the period to contemporary anxieties concerning the various and deeply significant changes brought about by the commercialising forces of a burgeoning tourism industry. This thesis proves that representations of these changes in popular fiction were bound up with questions of authorship, mass culture, and European cultural identity in the 1890s. This interdisciplinary work thus contributes to cultural scholarship of the period known as the Victorian fin de siécle through its focus on Egypt, tourism, and British occupation, therefore providing an essential and previously unconsidered perspective to existing scholarly debates.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherTrinity College Dublin. School of English. Discipline of Englishen
dc.rightsYen
dc.subjectVictorian popular fictionen
dc.subjectEgyptomaniaen
dc.subjectTourismen
dc.subjectGothicen
dc.subjectArthur Conan Doyleen
dc.subjectMarie Corellien
dc.subjectGuy Boothbyen
dc.subjectCheiroen
dc.subjectThe Tragedy of the Koroskoen
dc.subjectZiskaen
dc.subjectPharos the Egyptianen
dc.subjectA Bid for Fortuneen
dc.subjectThe Hand of Fateen
dc.titleAlways Some New Frontier: Tourism and the Gothic Imagination in Late-Victorian Egyptian-Themed Fictionen
dc.typeThesisen
dc.type.supercollectionthesis_dissertationsen
dc.type.supercollectionrefereed_publicationsen
dc.type.qualificationlevelDoctoralen
dc.identifier.peoplefinderurlhttps://tcdlocalportal.tcd.ie/pls/EnterApex/f?p=800:71:0::::P71_USERNAME:ORDONNELen
dc.identifier.rssinternalid278157en
dc.rights.ecaccessrightsopenAccess
dc.contributor.sponsorProvost Research Project Awarden
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2262/111794


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