<p>Early modern educational travel is usually associated with the Grand Tour: a young nobleman&#39;s journey through the approved cultural highlights of southern Europe. In fact this practice was heavily contested at the time and the idea of educational travel had far wider implications.<br />Through the study of a huge range of both canonical and little known sources from Abb&eacute; Pluche&#39;s educational best seller The Spectacle of Nature through Rousseau&#39;s Emile to practical prospectuses for collective educational travel in the revolutionary period Gell&eacute;ri investigates what it meant to &quot;think about travels&quot; in eighteenth-century France. Consideration of who should travel and for what purpose he argues contributed to an international intellectual tradition but also provided a pretext for debate on the social status quo including such issues as the place of the merchant class the necessity for professional training the uses of travel for young women and the education of a new generation of citizens of the Revolution.<br /><br />GBOR GELL&Eacute;RI is Lecturer in French at Aberystwyth University.</p>
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