One of the famous things was the "Turkish Embassy Letter" which she wrote when she went to the court of the Ottoman Empire with her husband. In addition, women have not announced at this time, but they did not prevent writing. Like France's "Precieuses" she spreads her poems to her friends and is more interested in satire, tact and sex. She is also a news editor and she publishes her own journal "common sense nonsense". By writing her own letter on the go and using her personal and sentimental style she adopted the style of "traveling story narrative".
In this paper, as an indirect criticism of the situation of women in British enlightenment we will study the letter of Turkish Embassy of Mrs. Mary Waterley Montague. I pay particular attention to the explanation of the relationship between Harlem's woman and Mary. I remember four main backgrounds: a book novel novel type, Oriental and Oriental story between Montague and her circle. The correspondence corresponds to the UK in the early 18th century, with confidence and booklet on women's behavior and position. Generally, I ask: What does TEL mean to a small number of English readers before 1750? What does it mean for a broader English reader?
In the travel record, the author records their adventures in a way that explains or eliminates insight into the site itself. The traveler has a legendary past from the letter of the Turkish Embassy of Mrs. Mary Walter Montague in 1763 to the overseas innocence of Mark Twain in 1867 and today's Bill Bryson's perfect cartoon travel path We are making a break. . In other words, please know that your memoirs need a very good personal story to compete in today's market. If you are still writing or publishing a memoir of your own journey, it is difficult to balance your personal background story with a trip of 400 pages, so the second pair of eyes Think about hiring a professional.
The travel story of the 18th century often stimulated their readers with their explanation of foreigners' odd habits. Embassy of Mary Walter Montague Express was written between 1716 and 1718 and was published in 1763 to provide readers with a Turkish perspective and it is not possible to witness the European people, the Turkish bath and Haarlem It will not be. The impression of Montague to Turkey is generally favorable, but most of the foreign land and custom descriptions highlight the cultural advantages of Central Europe. For example, a journey from Elizabeth Kraven's Crimea to Constantinople (1789) depicts Turkey as an empire depraving and collapsing. Jacob Wallenberg's "My Son in the Kitchen" (1781) hid the exploitation of the Swedish East India Company and gave a strange explanation of the customs and people of China and East India.