Definitive modern edition of Stevenson's intriguing account of his
emigration from Scotland to California
The Amateur Emigrant, an autobiographical account of Stevenson's voyage
from Scotland to California in 1879, is a rich and provocative work of
late-Victorian travel writing and cultural criticism. It describes
vividly how Stevenson mixed with 'steerage' passengers aboard an
Atlantic steamship and experienced the indignities of a transcontinental
emigrant train. The Amateur Emigrant engages critically with Victorian
ideas about class, race, and gender, and makes an important contribution
to the literature of emigration. Stevenson's middle-class family and
friends found the work so transgressive that it was withdrawn from
publication at proof stage. It was published in bowdlerized form in 1895
and since then has rarely been available in the form in which Stevenson
composed it.
Key Features
- Uses the original manuscript as copy text, making available the work
as Stevenson originally composed it
- Scholarly introduction situates The Amateur Emigrant in relation to
important biographical, critical, historical, social, and generic
contexts, and offers a summary of key critical responses
- Provides full textual apparatus including variant readings from
hitherto unavailable 1880 proofs, textual essay, explanatory notes,
and chronology
- Exciting new visual material including scans of the manuscript and
proofs and a map of Stevenson's journey