dc.description.abstract | The article aims at establishing how travellers perceived, depicted and evaluated Spanish women in the context of
their rich travelling experience. What were the aspects those travellers focused on, did their reports reflect
reality or did they create a stereotype? The analysis used the corpus data collected from the reports by foreign
visitors to the Iberian Peninsula such as diaries, notes, and letters since the eighties of the 18th century
until mid-19th century. They also include novels written on the basis of travelling experience.
The conducted research shows that the portrait of the Spanish woman in travellers’ reports is incomplete and
rather superficial. Foreigners saw Spain while passing through it, which allowed only an uncritical view of some
phenomena without their deeper understanding. It was also due to the fact that travellers would arrive with ready
assumptions about what they could see and subconsciously directed their attention to what they had expected and
not what was real. Thus they confirmed established images of the female inhabitants of the Iberian Peninsula. A
chain reaction resulted: travellers prepared for the journey from biased guide books, and in consequence what
they were looking for in Spain was in agreement with their reading. Then reports were made, which were equally
biased, and the persons reading them adopted a stereotypical image of Spain in general and of a Spanish woman in
particular. De facto, the image of Spain at the end of the Enlightenment and in the Romanticism was a derivative
of a simplified image of the country as a fantastic and exotic land of long transformation history that was
conducted slowly and was devoid of peculiar features. In other words, the country appeared not worth studying
diligently, just interesting enough to look at and contemplate. It had further consequence, namely the
descriptions of travels in Spain, thanks to a wide readership formed the general social opinion. Moreover, such
descriptions constituted a fertile ground for the dispute about women that was conducted in Europe at that time.
However, one cannot agree with the statement that all foreigners perceived Spain through Cervantes’s novel Don
Quixote as if the time had stopped and King Phillip II still ruled. Some travellers noticed a few symptoms of
transformation considering that in its narrow scope it encompassed women as well and it brought about changes in
the general understanding of at least some of the problems related to women. The view that foreign visitors
presented Spanish women merely as seducers who killed their lovers out of affection or as dancers singing and
entertaining with the guitar cannot be accepted. The conclusion to be drawn from the article is that although
important issues such as economic activity, charitable deeds and social actions of women were omitted and little
attention was given to everyday chores, yet their presence was observed in various contexts. The most commonly
discussed topic was beauty, nature, dress and love for luxury. Such passages are most stereotypical. Other
topics, for example related to social, cultural life, education, religious activities, and free choice of marital
status were treated realistically but most superficially to give the full picture of reality. In some issues
(beauty, conduct, dress, and freedom in paternal society) controversial opinions appear. Particular matters were
discussed with reference to upper class women but not only. Credibility of the reports varies depending on the
author and problem. Most critical reports come from Botkin and French female travellers. It is conspicuous that
it was the French women who first noticed that the Spanish women differ from description and in their reports
they made an attempt to portray the country and its inhabitants in a realistic way. | en_EN |