When I first began my research for this paper, I realized I needed to define “Travel Writing.” The genre is also often referred to as “Travel Literature.” Travel writing certainly doesn’t have to be non-fiction, which was a sort of vague assumption I had in the back of my mind at first. Guide books, memoirs, journalism, documentaries, and fictional stories can all be considered part of the travel writing genre.
I decided to go back in history and examine a few examples of early travel writing. I came across Petrarch, who I had studied in poetry classes. Petrarch was an Italian scholar who became well known in the humanistic movement for his climb of Mount Ventoux in 1336– which was one of the first documented accounts of traveling for the sake of travel (not out of necessity).
I also surveyed more contemporary travel writers, like Mark Twain and Henry David Thoreau, all the way up to Jan Morris and Jean Houston. I saw that nature writing often overlaps with travel writing. One of the hurdles I am encountering is the vastness of my topic. There are endless numbers of travel writers out there, good and bad, and thousands of sub-genres within the main genre. I am thinking I will narrow my paper down to three of four travel writers and focus on their biographies, achievements, etc…
Follow
Molly Tinsley’s visit this week sparked discussion about the relationship between the literary and the business sides of publishing. Her career as a writer spans genres—she’s written a novel, short stories, a creative writing textbook and award winning plays. In 2009, she and Karetta Hubbard founded
Tinsley explained the consolidation of the publishing industry in the 1980s and she described how the resulting moves to increase profit margins blurred the separation between art and commerce . As a result, large publishers gave increased priority to profitable instant books (including the celebrity bio genre), they took fewer risks (resulting in less diversity in what got published, fewer “quiet books,” and fewer chances–or second chances–for authors). As Ryland Taylor phrased it, censorship by business model was a result.