Abstract
This paper intends to track the development of traditional feminist ideas through the analysis of three contemporary travel blogs. These traditional feminist concepts are to be seen in the construction of a collective female identity that enables transnational and transgenerational solidarity: by receiving and transmitting inspiration, shelter and encouragement among female travellers, the narrators in the blogs create a system of female authority. Within this system, female role models as well as maternal figures become points of reference that help to revalue female attributes. This concept shows allusions to the theory of difference feminism as it is presented in the «symbolic order of the mother» by Luisa Muraro. A similar approach of revaluating femininity happens through the orientation towards ‘Mother Nature’. By staging women’s ability to give birth, cultural ecofeminists like Susan Griffin intend to affirm a close bond between women and nature. This representation of an emphasised femininity becomes a central marker in the narratives of the blogs. While this agenda might be designed to counter gendered spaces and the traditional alienation of women within travel discourse, it is problematised by exclusionary and essentialist definitions of femininity that harden engendered binaries like masculinity/femininity or nature/culture.
Highlights
This paper intends to track the development of traditional feminist ideas through the analysis of three contemporary travel blogs
Mirja Riggert Women’s travel writing in the cyber-world – ecofeminist and difference feminist approaches in travel blogs femininity becomes a central marker in the narratives of the blogs
This paper investigates the ways in which female identity is narratively constructed and continuously emphasised in three different examples of contemporary digital travel writing
Summary
This trip was never about some metaphorical dick measuring competition. But if it was, I’d be in a different class. She. Mirja Riggert Women’s travel writing in the cyber-world – ecofeminist and difference feminist approaches in travel blogs feels protected by an invisible, personified power that takes motherly care of her, so that she compares her posture after the survival to a «fetus position» and cuddles her bag «like a child» The narrator in Slowly North describes a similar experience of feeling connected and being protected by idol-like women during her travels The people she meets in Peru make her write about her trip and make her story last. This centralisation of maternal figures or female role models is a striking aspect in the representation of female travel experience, as we will see throughout the section
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