In her contribution to the recent volume edited by Patrizia Sambuco, Italian Women Writers 1800-2000: Boundaries, Borders and Transgression (2015), Rita Wilson explores topographies of identity along frontiers (borders mark clear divisions; frontiers, the unstable meeting-place of differences). She considers the novels by Giuliana Morandini (I cristalli di Vienna (1978); Caffè specchi (1983); Angelo a Berlino (1987)), in particular how and why her protagonists feel themselves to be outsiders present in, but distanced from, the Central European capitals where they live. She pursues the theme of partly alienated observers, disenchanted flâneuses in their city streets, in the novel Amiche per la pelle (2007) by Laila Waida, born in India but living in Trieste.
In the same volume, Patrizia Sambuco examines how, in Nel paese di Gesù. Ricordi di un viaggio in Palestina (1899), and Lettere di una viaggiatrice (1908), Matilde Serao handles two further kinds of boundary-crossings: journeys into unfamiliar societies and the then unconventional role of women as travellers.