- Emmeline Lott
Emmeline Lott was the author of "The English Governess in Egypt: Harem Life in Egypt and Constantinople" (1865), an account of her employment as governess to the young son of Ismail Pacha, Viceroy of Egypt. [Peterson and Brothers, 1865] Lott believed that her position as a "humble individual" and member of the household provided her with a more authentic perspective than that of aristocratic visitors such as
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu , for whom the harem was tidied up for public viewing. Lott's tone towards Egyptian women is often contemptous - she claims that far from being Oriental beauties of European fantasy, they are "hideous and hag-like". Lott believed herself to be superior to Egyptians by virtue of her race; it was a shock to find that as a governess, she was treated as a servant and a social inferior.References Lott, Emmeline "The English Governess in Egypt: Harem Life in Egypt and Constantinople", Bentley (London 1866)
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