
Attribution
James BuzardPublication Details
BookOxford University Press1992Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (UPPER LEVEL) PR129.E85 B89 1992 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogDescription
Drawing on a wide range of texts from literature, travel writing, guidebooks, periodicals, and business histories, the book shows how a democratizing and institutionalizing tourism gave rise to new formulations about what constitutes “authentic” cultural experience. This elegantly written book brings up debates in cultural studies concerning the ideology of leisure and concludes that in this period tourism became an exemplary cultural practice appearing to be both popularly accessible and exclusive. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
- English literature — 19th century — History and criticism
- English literature — 20th century — History and criticism
- American literature — History and criticism
- Americans — Travel — Europe — Historiography
- British — Travel — Europe — Historiography
- Tourism — Europe — History
- Travelers — Europe — History
- Europe — In literature
- Great Britain — Civilization — European influences
- United States — Civilization — European influences
Places in this work
Notes
- The Beaten Track is a major study of European Tourism during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It draws on a wide variety of sources from high literature and travel writing to periodicals and guidebooks to reveal an important current in the history of the modern concept of ‘culture’, in both popular and elite forms. James Buzard demonstrates that a view of Continental tourism as open to virtually all classes came to dominate the British and American travelling imagination in this period - a process encouraged by the activities of travel popularizers like Thomas Cook, John Murray III, and the Baedekers. One consequence was a powerful distinction between the ‘true traveller’ and the ‘mere tourist’. The influence of this opposition on nineteenth-century culture - and on the emerging idea of culture - is traced by Buzard in the writings of many authors, including Wordsworth, Dickens, Frances Trollope, Ruskin, Anna Jameson, Henry James, and E. M. Forster, as well as in periodicals from Punch to Blackwood’s Magazine. ‘Authentic culture’ was to be found in the secret precincts off tourism’s beaten track, where it could be discovered only by the sensitive traveller, not the vulgar tourist. This elegantly written study engages with debates in cultural studies concerning the ideology of leisure. For Buzard, tourism’s apparent combination of both popular accessibility and exclusivity allows it to stand as an especially revealing instance of modern cultural practice
Contents
- 1. Tourist and Traveller in the Network of Nineteenth- Century Travel
- 2. Tourism and Anti-Tourism: Conventions and Strategies
- 3. A Scripted Continent: British and American Travel-Writers in Europe, c. 1825-1875
- 4. Ambivalent Appropriations: Culture and the Tourist in James
- 5. Forster’s Trespasses: Tourism and Cultural Politics
ISBN
- 0198112955
LCCN
Open Library ID
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