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Journal ArticleDOI

19th‐century Travel and the 21st‐century Scholar

Alex L. Milsom
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 9, pp 725-733
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TLDR
The authors examines the emergent use of tourism theory in 19th-century literary studies in books published since the start of the 21st century and argues that tourism theory has been adequately integrated into literary studies about travel and tourism and thus its scholars need no longer apologize for interdisciplinarity nor for discarding the observance of strict boundaries between literary and non-literary genres.
Abstract
This article examines the emergent use of tourism theory in 19th-century literary studies in books published since the start of the 21st century Areas in which such interdisciplinary methods have been particularly fruitful include studies of place-oriented individual writers like John Ruskin and Sir Walter Scott as well as in narrowly focused studies of literary tourism The article argues that tourism theory, as conceived by sociologist Dean MacCannell and later brought to the attention of literary scholars by Jonathan Culler, has been adequately integrated into literary studies about travel and tourism and thus its scholars need no longer apologize for interdisciplinarity nor for discarding the observance of strict boundaries between literary and non-literary genres Twenty-first-century studies on the ways in which Romantic and Victorian literature helped encourage, validate, and reflect upon travel have now made it impossible to study 19th-century tourism without studying its literature

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Book ChapterDOI

Science in the city: scientific display and urban performance in Victorian travel guides to London

TL;DR: In this paper, the first analysis of scientific representations in travel guide books to London is presented, and the authors conclude that travel guides are the location of a particularly rich interaction between science and the humanities, where literary writers give science a powerful place in an emerging modernity through language.
References
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MonographDOI

The spatial turn : interdisciplinary perspectives

TL;DR: In this article, Serje and Soja describe a trip to Colombia in which they see a world in a grain of sand and place on an Ethnographical Journey in Colombia (Margarita Serje).
MonographDOI

The Beaten Track

James Buzard