Contested Russian Tourism

Contested Russian Tourism

Cosmopolitanism, Nation, and Empire in the Nineteenth Century

Layton, Susan

Academic Studies Press

08/2021

500

Dura

Inglês

9781644694206

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
Acknowledgements
Illustrations
Note on Transliteration, Translation, and Abbreviations
Introduction
Part One: Becoming Tourists
1. Russia's Enlightenment Travel Model: Karamzin, the English, and Italy
2. The Romantic Vacation Mentality
3. Nationalist Worries about Tourism: Pogodin, Belinsky, Zagoskin
4. Vacationing in the Caucasus: Authenticity and the Sophisticate/Provincial Divide
Part Two: Shocks of Modernization
5. Inundating the West after the Crimean War
6. Tourist Angst: Aesthetics, Moral Imagination, and Politics in Tolstoy's Lucerne
7. Cosmopolitans, the Crowd, and Radical Killjoys: Turgenev, Other Writers, and the Critics
8. Dostoevsky's Anti-Cosmopolitan Animus toward Tourism
Part Three: Embourgeoisement and Its Enemies
9. The Rising Tourist Tide: Foreign Travel from Winter Notes to Anna Karenina
10. Anna Karenina and the Tourist Passion for Italy
11. Tatars and the Tourist Boom in the Crimea: Markov's Sketches of the Crimea and Other Writings
12. Tourist Decadence at the Fin-de-Siecle: Chekhov, Veselitskaya, and Other Writers
Concluding Observations
Bibliography
Russian literature;tourism;cosmopolitanism;art appreciation;empire;Caucasus;Crimea;travel;social history;Winter Notes;Anna Karenina;19th century;nineteenth century;vacation;tourists