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Volumn 33, Issue 1, 2006, Pages 77-107

New York City and the transatlantic imagination: French and English tourism and the spectacle of the modern metropolis, 1893-1939

Author keywords

Guidebooks; New York City; Occidentalism; Tourism; Travel writing

Indexed keywords

ETHNICITY; METROPOLITAN AREA; MODERNIZATION; NINETEENTH CENTURY; TOURISM; TOURIST DESTINATION; URBAN HISTORY;

EID: 33749579654     PISSN: 00961442     EISSN: 15526771     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1177/0096144206290385     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (37)

References (115)
  • 2
    • 33749561736 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (Berkeley: University of California Press)
    • C. Cocks, Doing the Town (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001).
    • (2001) Doing the Town
    • Cocks, C.1
  • 8
    • 33645269256 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • For a critique of Buruma and Margalit's conception of "occidentalism," see (Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan)
    • For a critique of Buruma and Margalit's conception of "occidentalism," see A. Bonnett, The Idea of the West: Culture, Politics and History (Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004).
    • (2004) The Idea of the West: Culture, Politics and History
    • Bonnett, A.1
  • 11
    • 30944453160 scopus 로고
    • See for example (New York: New York Public Library) H. Commager, ed., America in Perspective: The United States through Foreign Eyes (New York: New American Library, 1947); A. Nevins, America through British Eyes (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1948); R. Rapson, Britons View America: Travel Commentary 1860-1935 (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1971); C. Mulvey, Anglo-American Landscapes (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983); D. Jullien, Récits du Nouveau Monde: Les voyageurs français en Amérique de Chateaubriand à nos jours (Paris: Nathan, 1992); and S. Schama, "The Unloved American," New Yorker, March 10, 2003
    • See for example F. Monaghan, French Travellers in the United States, 1765-1932 (New York: New York Public Library, 1933); H. Commager, ed., America in Perspective: The United States through Foreign Eyes (New York: New American Library, 1947); A. Nevins, America through British Eyes (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1948); R. Rapson, Britons View America: Travel Commentary 1860-1935 (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1971); C. Mulvey, Anglo-American Landscapes (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983); D. Jullien, Récits du Nouveau Monde: Les voyageurs français en Amérique de Chateaubriand à nos jours (Paris: Nathan, 1992); and S. Schama, "The Unloved American," New Yorker, March 10, 2003.
    • (1933) French Travellers in the United States, 1765-1932
    • Monaghan, F.1
  • 12
    • 0002552061 scopus 로고
    • "The Blue Guide"
    • This interpretation of the knowledge of the guidebook is most famously expressed by Roland Barthes in his polemic on the Guide Blue to Franco's Spain - "an agent of blindness." in his (English trans., London: Paladin 1973)
    • This interpretation of the knowledge of the guidebook is most famously expressed by Roland Barthes in his polemic on the Guide Blue to Franco's Spain - "an agent of blindness." Roland Barthes, "The Blue Guide," in his Mythologies (1957; English trans., London: Paladin 1973); 74-77.
    • (1957) Mythologies , pp. 74-77
    • Barthes, R.1
  • 14
    • 84941034358 scopus 로고
    • As James Buzard has demonstrated, this attitude that he describes as antitourism emerged almost as soon as the modern category of "the tourist." See (Oxford: Clarendon)
    • As James Buzard has demonstrated, this attitude that he describes as antitourism emerged almost as soon as the modern category of "the tourist." See J. Buzard, The Beaten Track: European Tourism, Literature, and the Ways to Culture, 1800-1918 (Oxford: Clarendon, 1993).
    • (1993) The Beaten Track: European Tourism, Literature, and the Ways to Culture, 1800-1918
    • Buzard, J.1
  • 16
    • 33749555217 scopus 로고
    • Contemporary travel accounts and advertisements for relatively inexpensive steerage tours to the Exposition suggested that the market for trips extended to the ordinary middle classes and some members of the working class. See for example (London: Longmans) and N. Smith, A Tour through the Land of the West and a Visit to the Columbian Exhibition by a Birmingham Working Man (London: Simpkin and Marshall, 1894). By 1910, promotional materials for the Anchor Line were recommending that tourists avoided the peak season between April and July. "How to Enjoy a Refreshing Holiday," Anchor Line promotional pamphlet, Glasgow University Archives UGD255/1/23/7
    • Contemporary travel accounts and advertisements for relatively inexpensive steerage tours to the Exposition suggested that the market for trips extended to the ordinary middle classes and some members of the working class. See for example W. Smith, A Yorkshireman's Trip to the United States and Canada (London: Longmans, 1892) and N. Smith, A Tour through the Land of the West and a Visit to the Columbian Exhibition by a Birmingham Working Man (London: Simpkin and Marshall, 1894). By 1910, promotional materials for the Anchor Line were recommending that tourists avoided the peak season between April and July. "How to Enjoy a Refreshing Holiday," Anchor Line promotional pamphlet, Glasgow University Archives UGD255/1/23/7.
    • (1892) A Yorkshireman's Trip to the United States and Canada
    • Smith, W.1
  • 17
    • 33749583716 scopus 로고
    • "Guidebooks"
    • Hammack suggests that 1893 was a significant turning point in the development of tourist literature for New York and that previous guides were usually intended for immigrants to the city, or commercial and business travelers, and emphasized everyday practicalities rather than sightseeing. ed. K. Jackson (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press) For a detailed discussion of the mid-nineteenth-century urban handbook in the United States, see Cocks, Doing the Town
    • Hammack suggests that 1893 was a significant turning point in the development of tourist literature for New York and that previous guides were usually intended for immigrants to the city, or commercial and business travelers, and emphasized everyday practicalities rather than sightseeing. D. Hammack, "Guidebooks," in The Encyclopedia of New York City, ed. K. Jackson (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1995). For a detailed discussion of the mid-nineteenth-century urban handbook in the United States, see Cocks, Doing the Town, 25-40.
    • (1995) The Encyclopedia of New York City , pp. 25-40
    • Hammack, D.1
  • 20
    • 33749550044 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • This was despite the existence of an American copy of a Baedeker-style guidebook from the late 1840s onwards. See discussion in Cocks, Doing the Town Despite Muirhead's observation, Cocks points out that internal tourism in the United States was already well developed by the 1890s
    • This was despite the existence of an American copy of a Baedeker-style guidebook, Appleton's New and Complete United States Guide Book for Travellers, from the late 1840s onwards. See discussion in Cocks, Doing the Town, 27-27. Despite Muirhead's observation, Cocks points out that internal tourism in the United States was already well developed by the 1890s.
    • Appleton's New and Complete United States Guide Book for Travellers , pp. 27
  • 22
    • 0000178990 scopus 로고
    • "Baedeker's Universe"
    • esp. 396
    • E. Mendelson, "Baedeker's Universe," Yale Review 74 (1985): 386-403, esp. 396.
    • (1985) Yale Review , vol.74 , pp. 386-403
    • Mendelson, E.1
  • 25
    • 33749571612 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Urban Tourism"
    • Harris, "Urban Tourism," 69-69.
    • Harris1
  • 28
    • 0032868062 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "'London in All Its Glory - Or How to Enjoy London': Guidebook Representations of Imperial London"
    • See and MacCannell, The Tourist. McCannell's account of the Paris Baedeker for 1900 if anything overemphasizes the novelty of this fascination for the modern in the city. There is a long tradition of celebration of the new in guides to the city and notes for travelers from the late eighteenth century onwards. Guides from mid-nineteenth-century Paris could be very dismissive about the dirty, dark, old medieval areas and monuments of Paris, contrasting them with the beauty of brand new perspectives and bright new stone
    • See D. Gilbert, "'London in All Its Glory - or How to Enjoy London': Guidebook Representations of Imperial London," Journal of Historical Geography 25 (1999): 279-297; and MacCannell, The Tourist. McCannell's account of the Paris Baedeker for 1900 if anything overemphasizes the novelty of this fascination for the modern in the city. There is a long tradition of celebration of the new in guides to the city and notes for travelers from the late eighteenth century onwards. Guides from mid-nineteenth-century Paris could be very dismissive about the dirty, dark, old medieval areas and monuments of Paris, contrasting them with the beauty of brand new perspectives and bright new stone.
    • (1999) Journal of Historical Geography , vol.25 , pp. 279-297
    • Gilbert, D.1
  • 31
    • 33749571483 scopus 로고
    • For other examples of tours of New York with this form, see (London: Sampson Low) and W. Black, The Real United States and Canada Pocket Guide-Book (London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent, 1915), 58-59
    • For other examples of tours of New York with this form, see The Englishman's Guidebook to the United States and Canada (London: Sampson Low, 1886), 22-22; and W. Black, The Real United States and Canada Pocket Guide-Book (London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent, 1915), 58-59.
    • (1886) The Englishman's Guidebook to the United States and Canada , pp. 22
  • 36
    • 33749561736 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • indicates that there was a marked shift in the character of urban guides from the 1890s see also Harris, "Urban Tourism," 78-78
    • Catherine Cocks indicates that there was a marked shift in the character of urban guides from the 1890s, in Doing the Town, 143-148; see also Harris, "Urban Tourism," 78-78.
    • Doing the Town , pp. 143-148
    • Cocks, C.1
  • 37
    • 33749558502 scopus 로고
    • Writing for prospective French tourists in 1935, Fernand-Gregh recommended the use of either guide in the absence of an up-to-date French equivalent. (Paris: Société française d'éditions littéraires et techniques)
    • Writing for prospective French tourists in 1935, Fernand-Gregh recommended the use of either guide in the absence of an up-to-date French equivalent. H. Fernand-Gregh, Vertige de New York (Paris: Société française d'éditions littéraires et techniques, 1935), 25-25.
    • (1935) Vertige De New York , pp. 25
    • Fernand-Gregh, H.1
  • 40
    • 33749571612 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Urban Tourism"
    • Quoted in
    • Quoted in Harris, "Urban Tourism," 79-79.
    • Harris1
  • 41
    • 33749581366 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 1st ed. and Karl Baedeker, The United States with an Excursion into Mexico, 4th ed. (1909), 39-39. This particular change from "authentic" sight to staged event was exacerbated by the vigorous antinarcotics campaign that took place in the 1890s and 1900s, pushing drug taking further away from public spaces of the city. See R. King, "Narcotic Drug Laws and Enforcement Policies," Law and Contemporary Problems 113 (1957): 124-126
    • Baedeker, United States, 1st ed., 29-29; and Karl Baedeker, The United States with an Excursion into Mexico, 4th ed. (1909), 39-39. This particular change from "authentic" sight to staged event was exacerbated by the vigorous antinarcotics campaign that took place in the 1890s and 1900s, pushing drug taking further away from public spaces of the city. See R. King, "Narcotic Drug Laws and Enforcement Policies," Law and Contemporary Problems 113 (1957): 124-126.
    • United States , pp. 29
    • Baedeker1
  • 42
    • 33749571612 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Urban Tourism"
    • Harris, "Urban Tourism," 80-80.
    • Harris1
  • 44
    • 33749560541 scopus 로고
    • (London: Martin Secker)
    • A. Bennett, Those United States (London: Martin Secker, 1912), 236-237.
    • (1912) Those United States , pp. 236-237
    • Bennett, A.1
  • 45
    • 33749566903 scopus 로고
    • (Paris: Les Œuvres Françaises)
    • P. Malo, La féerie américaine (Paris: Les Œuvres Françaises, 1936), 68.
    • (1936) La Féerie Américaine , pp. 68
    • Malo, P.1
  • 48
    • 33749551003 scopus 로고
    • (London: Vizetelly)
    • G. A. Sala, America Revisited (London: Vizetelly, 1882), 117-117.
    • (1882) America Revisited , pp. 117
    • Sala, G.A.1
  • 49
    • 33749565313 scopus 로고
    • (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press) See also G. Fenske and D. Holdsworth, "Corporate Identity and the New York Office Building: 1895-1915," in The Landscape of Modernity: Essays on New York City, 1900-1940, ed. D. Ward and O. Zunz (New York: Russell Sage, 1992), 129-159
    • M. Domosh, Invented Cities: The Creation of Landscape in Nineteenth-Century New York and Boston (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1993), 94-95. See also G. Fenske and D. Holdsworth, "Corporate Identity and the New York Office Building: 1895-1915," in The Landscape of Modernity: Essays on New York City, 1900-1940, ed. D. Ward and O. Zunz (New York: Russell Sage, 1992), 129-159.
    • (1993) Invented Cities: The Creation of Landscape in Nineteenth-Century New York and Boston , pp. 94-95
    • Domosh, M.1
  • 52
    • 33749562669 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • At more or less the same time, San Gimignano was starting to be interpreted for Americans in Italy as the little Manhattan of Tuscany
    • At more or less the same time, San Gimignano was starting to be interpreted for Americans in Italy as the little Manhattan of Tuscany.
  • 54
    • 0004263115 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • for comments on other travelers to New York and their responses to the nocturnal city
    • Nye, American Technological Sublime, 192-193, for comments on other travelers to New York and their responses to the nocturnal city.
    • American Technological Sublime , pp. 192-193
    • Nye1
  • 55
    • 33749579560 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Commercial Aesthetics"
    • See discussion of Veblen in Leach
    • See discussion of Veblen in Leach, "Commercial Aesthetics," 241-242.
  • 56
    • 33749558005 scopus 로고
    • (London: E. J. Burrow)
    • The Book of the Anchor Line (London: E. J. Burrow, 1932), 86-86.
    • (1932) The Book of the Anchor Line , pp. 86
  • 60
    • 33749555216 scopus 로고
    • (Paris: Société Française de Libraire et d'Edition) and J. Landry, Hommes et choses d'Amérique (Paris: Lefort-Taffin, 1897), 264
    • M.-T. Gadala, Nouveau Monde. Impressions d'Amérique (Paris: Société Française de Libraire et d'Edition, 1934), 47; and J. Landry, Hommes et choses d'Amérique (Paris: Lefort-Taffin, 1897), 264.
    • (1934) Nouveau Monde. Impressions D'Amérique , pp. 47
    • Gadala, M.-T.1
  • 64
    • 33749576236 scopus 로고
    • "Form Follows Finance: The Empire State Building"
    • See ed. D. Ward and O. Zunz (New York: Russell Sage)
    • See C. Willis, "Form Follows Finance: The Empire State Building," in The Landscape of Modernity: Essays on New York City, 1900-1940, ed. D. Ward and O. Zunz (New York: Russell Sage, 1992), 160-187.
    • (1992) The Landscape of Modernity: Essays on New York City, 1900-1940 , pp. 160-187
    • Willis, C.1
  • 67
    • 33749566660 scopus 로고
    • "New-York La Ville Merveilleuse. Voir New-York en une semaine"
    • See July (Paris: Wagon-Lits) and "Bracing Holidays on the Atlantic at Special Excursion Fares," brochure (1938), in the Thomas Cook Company Archives, Peterborough, UK
    • See "New-York La Ville Merveilleuse. Voir New-York en une semaine," Revue de Voyages, July (Paris: Wagon-Lits, 1935); and "Bracing Holidays on the Atlantic at Special Excursion Fares," brochure (1938), in the Thomas Cook Company Archives, Peterborough, UK.
    • (1935) Revue De Voyages
  • 68
    • 33749566433 scopus 로고
    • The transatlantic liners were highly segregated moving societies. Wells described them as "social microcosms" with a small plutocracy in first class, a middle class on the second-class deck, and, until the a huge "proletariat" in steerage (The strict rules of segregation among decks seemed to actively encourage transgressive social exploration of the lower areas of the liners by first- and second-class passengers. The end of steerage in the 1920s decreased this temptation onboard ship-the new tourist-class quarters were dull, prosaic, and functional, rather than spectacles of human poverty and difference
    • The transatlantic liners were highly segregated moving societies. Wells described them as "social microcosms" with a small plutocracy in first class, a middle class on the second-class deck, and, until the 1920s, a huge "proletariat" in steerage (Wells, Future in America, 40). The strict rules of segregation among decks seemed to actively encourage transgressive social exploration of the lower areas of the liners by first- and second-class passengers. The end of steerage in the 1920s decreased this temptation onboard ship-the new tourist-class quarters were dull, prosaic, and functional, rather than spectacles of human poverty and difference.
    • (1920) Future in America , pp. 40
    • Wells1
  • 73
    • 33749556818 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • closing ellipses in original
    • Wells, Future in America, 65-65, closing ellipses in original.
    • Future in America , pp. 65
    • Wells1
  • 74
    • 33749556818 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • closing ellipses in original. closing ellipses in original
    • Ibid., 62, closing ellipses in original.
    • Future in America , pp. 62
    • Wells1
  • 75
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    • One common allusion in travel literature was to Manhattan as a giant boat, as if it might one day float off to somewhere more appropriate-see P. Daye, Sam ou le voyage dans l'optimiste Amérique (Paris: Perrin, 1922), 14; Fernand-Gregh, Vertige de New York, 17; and P. Malo, La féerie américaine (Paris: Les Œuvres Françaises, 1935), 20
    • Rapson, Britons View America, 28-28. One common allusion in travel literature was to Manhattan as a giant boat, as if it might one day float off to somewhere more appropriate-see P. Daye, Sam ou le voyage dans l'optimiste Amérique (Paris: Perrin, 1922), 14; Fernand-Gregh, Vertige de New York, 17; and P. Malo, La féerie américaine (Paris: Les Œuvres Françaises, 1935), 20.
    • Britons View America , pp. 28
    • Rapson1
  • 76
    • 0001940605 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Imperial Cities: Overlapping Territories, Intertwined Histories"
    • ed. F. Driver and D. Gilbert (Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press)
    • F. Driver and D. Gilbert, "Imperial Cities: Overlapping Territories, Intertwined Histories," in Imperial Cities: Landscape, Display and Identity, ed. F. Driver and D. Gilbert (Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 1999), 15-15.
    • (1999) Imperial Cities: Landscape, Display and Identity , pp. 15
    • Driver, F.1    Gilbert, D.2
  • 77
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    • See discussion of the terminology used by in A. Douglas (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux) The European use of "cosmopolitan" and "cosmopolis" is closer to the use of the term mongrelization by contemporary American conservatives
    • See discussion of the terminology used by James Weldon Johnson and Dorothy Parker in A. Douglas, Terrible Honesty: Mongrel Manhattan in the 1920s (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1995), 5-6. The European use of "cosmopolitan" and "cosmopolis" is closer to the use of the term mongrelization by contemporary American conservatives.
    • (1995) Terrible Honesty: Mongrel Manhattan in the 1920s , pp. 5-6
    • Johnson, J.W.1    Parker, D.2
  • 78
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    • (London: Hodder and Staunton) and G. Frankau, My Unsentimental Journey (London: Hutchinson, 1926), 38-38
    • G. K. Chesterton, What I Saw in America (London: Hodder and Staunton, 1923), 64-64; and G. Frankau, My Unsentimental Journey (London: Hutchinson, 1926), 38-38.
    • (1923) What I Saw in America , pp. 64
    • Chesterton, G.K.1
  • 79
    • 33749556576 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "New-York La Ville Merveilleuse"
    • "New-York La Ville Merveilleuse."
  • 82
    • 33646072671 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • This treatment of the city was not, of course, limited to those publications that were aimed at visiting European tourists, and it became one of the ways in which Americans from beyond Manhattan were taught to understand and consume New York. Konrad Bercovici's guidebook Around the World in New York (New York: Century, 1924) was a focused example of what was becoming a central element of the tourist geography of New York
    • Rider, New York City, 122-122. This treatment of the city was not, of course, limited to those publications that were aimed at visiting European tourists, and it became one of the ways in which Americans from beyond Manhattan were taught to understand and consume New York. Konrad Bercovici's guidebook Around the World in New York (New York: Century, 1924) was a focused example of what was becoming a central element of the tourist geography of New York.
    • New York City , pp. 122
    • Rider1
  • 87
    • 0032868062 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "'London in All Its Glory - Or How to Enjoy London': Guidebook Representations of Imperial London"
    • Whitechapel's decline as a tourist destination was a reflection of the changing social and visual characteristics of the district, of changes in London's imperial role, and also of shifts in the dominant tourist understandings of London, which were restricting the geographical distribution of sights to a more concentrated historical core
    • Whitechapel's decline as a tourist destination was a reflection of the changing social and visual characteristics of the district, of changes in London's imperial role, and also of shifts in the dominant tourist understandings of London, which were restricting the geographical distribution of sights to a more concentrated historical core. See Gilbert, "London in All Its Glory," 286.
    • (1999) Journal of Historical Geography , vol.25 , pp. 286
    • Gilbert, D.1
  • 90
    • 0013340406 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Sensing the City"
    • See Urry's comments on the sensory qualities of tourism. ed. D. Judd and S. Fainstein (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press)
    • See Urry's comments on the sensory qualities of tourism. J. Urry, "Sensing the City," in The Tourist City, ed. D. Judd and S. Fainstein (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1999).
    • (1999) The Tourist City
    • Urry, J.1
  • 95
    • 0007460652 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (1930; reprint, New York: Atheneum)
    • J. W. Johnson, Black Manhattan (1930; reprint, New York: Atheneum, 1969), 160-160.
    • (1969) Black Manhattan , pp. 160
    • Johnson, J.W.1
  • 100
    • 33749561322 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • and Malo, La féerie américaine, 86
    • Gadala, Nouveau Monde, 84-84; and Malo, La féerie américaine, 86.
    • Nouveau Monde , pp. 84
    • Gadala1
  • 101
    • 33749540255 scopus 로고
    • See, for example (London: Hutchinson)
    • See, for example, A. Tweedie, America as I Saw It (London: Hutchinson, 1913), 225-225.
    • (1913) America As I Saw It , pp. 225
    • Tweedie, A.1
  • 104
    • 0001809837 scopus 로고
    • "The Other Question...: The Stereotype and Colonial Discourse"
    • H. Bhabha, "The Other Question...: The Stereotype and Colonial Discourse," Screen 24, no. 6 (1983): 19-19.
    • (1983) Screen , vol.24 , Issue.6 , pp. 19
    • Bhabha, H.1
  • 106
    • 0012277775 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "'All This Is the Empire, I Told Myself': Australian Women's Voyages 'Home' and the Articulation of Colonial Whiteness"
    • 1025-1025. This theme is powerfully developed in Woollacott's discussion of travel accounts of white Australian women traveling through the Asian and African ports of the British Empire
    • A. Woollacott, "'All This Is the Empire, I Told Myself': Australian Women's Voyages 'Home' and the Articulation of Colonial Whiteness," American Historical Review 102 (1997): 1003-1029, 1025-1025. This theme is powerfully developed in Woollacott's discussion of travel accounts of white Australian women traveling through the Asian and African ports of the British Empire.
    • (1997) American Historical Review , vol.102 , pp. 1003-1029
    • Woollacott, A.1
  • 110
    • 33749563665 scopus 로고
    • See, for example, advertising copy and special features in editions of The Traveller's Gazette and Revue de Voyages from the spring of
    • See, for example, advertising copy and special features in editions of The Traveller's Gazette and Revue de Voyages from the spring of 1939.
    • (1939)
  • 113
    • 0038099797 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See the discussion of antitourism in Buzard
    • See the discussion of antitourism in Buzard, The Beaten Track.
    • The Beaten Track
  • 114
    • 0004002591 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See the essays in D. Judd and S. Fainstein, eds. (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press) and D. Judd, ed., The Infrastructure of Play: Building the Tourist City (Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe, 2003); see also the discussion of the Americanization of tourist landscapes in MacCannell, The Tourist, 189-203
    • See the essays in D. Judd and S. Fainstein, eds., The Tourist City (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1999); and D. Judd, ed., The Infrastructure of Play: Building the Tourist City (Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe, 2003); see also the discussion of the Americanization of tourist landscapes in MacCannell, The Tourist, 189-203.
    • (1999) The Tourist City
  • 115
    • 33749557268 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Any research on New York City is now touched by the events of September 11 particularly when the symbolic significance of its skyline is considered. Although clearly outside the historical scope of this article, there is a story to be told about the significance of New York's place in global tourism in the response to the attacks. Part of the immediacy of the horror felt across the world had to do the fact that millions had been to the top of the towers as tourists
    • Any research on New York City is now touched by the events of September 11, 2001, particularly when the symbolic significance of its skyline is considered. Although clearly outside the historical scope of this article, there is a story to be told about the significance of New York's place in global tourism in the response to the attacks. Part of the immediacy of the horror felt across the world had to do the fact that millions had been to the top of the towers as tourists.
    • (2001)


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