Race and Class
Volume 46, Issue 3, 2005, Pages 39-54
Robert Louis Stevenson: Class and 'race' in The Amateur Emigrant (Review)
Phillips L.
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a
Liverpool Hope University College, United Kingdom
Abstract
In 1879, an impoverished Stevenson travelled from Scotland to California in conditions almost identical to those of working-class and poverty-stricken emigrants. His account, The Amateur Emigrant, shocked the class sensitivities of his family and friends, and was not published in full in his lifetime. The experience had a profound effect on Stevenson's personal sensibilities; his consciousness of his ambivalent position as a middle-class writer in the midst of his working-class contemporaries renders The Amateur Emigrant a remarkable revelation of the intermingled complexities of class, race and gender in late Victorian England.
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-12444281710&doi=10.1177%2f0306396805050017&partnerID=40&md5=6f6f9047a62d4e8afa3b203c8e86330a
DOI: 10.1177/0306396805050017
ISSN: 03063968
Original Language: English