This article contrasts two accounts by women written between 1936 and 1939 describing their experiences of Spain during the Spanish Civil War. The aim is to question how far travel writers have a political and ethical relation to the place they visit and to what extent they deal with this in their texts. The global politics of travel writing and the distinction between colonial and cosmopolitan travel writers affect the way a foreign culture is articulated for the home market through discursive and linguistic strategies. The texts are Kate O’Brien’s Farewell Spain (1937) and Gamel Woolsey’s Death’s Other Kingdom: A Spanish Village in 1936 (1939). The conclusions suggest women adopt a range of positions toward the Spanish conflict, depending on their personal commitment and their contact with local people, but their concern to articulate the experience of others in time of crisis has a strong ethical component.
Maureen Mulligan, is a Senior Lecturer at Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. She studied at New Hall, Cambridge University and Goldsmiths College, London University. She has taught in various countries, including Britain, the Seychelles and Sweden. She worked for the British Council in Spain, and since 1993 has worked for the ULPGC in the Canary Islands. Her doctoral thesis dealt with British women travel writers in the 19th and 20th centuries. She has published various articles and chapters on this subject. E-mail: maureen.mulligan@ulpgc.es