Contested Russian Tourism: Cosmopolitanism, Nation, and Empire in the Nineteenth Century
This literary, cultural history examines imperial Russian tourism’s entanglement in the vexed issue of cosmopolitanism understood as receptiveness to the foreign and pitted against provinciality and nationalist anxiety about the allure and the influence of Western Europe. The study maps the shift from Enlightenment cosmopolitanism to Byronic cosmopolitanism with special attention to the art pilgrimage abroad. For typically middle-class Russians daunted by the cultural riches of the West, vacationing in the North Caucasus, Georgia, and the Crimea afforded the compensatory opportunity to play colonizer kings and queens in “Asia.” Drawing on Anna Karenina and other literary classics, travel writing, journalism, and guidebooks, the investigation engages with current debates in cosmopolitan studies, including the fuzzy paradigm of “colonial cosmopolitanism.”

1138792604
Contested Russian Tourism: Cosmopolitanism, Nation, and Empire in the Nineteenth Century
This literary, cultural history examines imperial Russian tourism’s entanglement in the vexed issue of cosmopolitanism understood as receptiveness to the foreign and pitted against provinciality and nationalist anxiety about the allure and the influence of Western Europe. The study maps the shift from Enlightenment cosmopolitanism to Byronic cosmopolitanism with special attention to the art pilgrimage abroad. For typically middle-class Russians daunted by the cultural riches of the West, vacationing in the North Caucasus, Georgia, and the Crimea afforded the compensatory opportunity to play colonizer kings and queens in “Asia.” Drawing on Anna Karenina and other literary classics, travel writing, journalism, and guidebooks, the investigation engages with current debates in cosmopolitan studies, including the fuzzy paradigm of “colonial cosmopolitanism.”

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Contested Russian Tourism: Cosmopolitanism, Nation, and Empire in the Nineteenth Century

Contested Russian Tourism: Cosmopolitanism, Nation, and Empire in the Nineteenth Century

by Susan Layton
Contested Russian Tourism: Cosmopolitanism, Nation, and Empire in the Nineteenth Century

Contested Russian Tourism: Cosmopolitanism, Nation, and Empire in the Nineteenth Century

by Susan Layton

Hardcover

$139.00 
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Overview

This literary, cultural history examines imperial Russian tourism’s entanglement in the vexed issue of cosmopolitanism understood as receptiveness to the foreign and pitted against provinciality and nationalist anxiety about the allure and the influence of Western Europe. The study maps the shift from Enlightenment cosmopolitanism to Byronic cosmopolitanism with special attention to the art pilgrimage abroad. For typically middle-class Russians daunted by the cultural riches of the West, vacationing in the North Caucasus, Georgia, and the Crimea afforded the compensatory opportunity to play colonizer kings and queens in “Asia.” Drawing on Anna Karenina and other literary classics, travel writing, journalism, and guidebooks, the investigation engages with current debates in cosmopolitan studies, including the fuzzy paradigm of “colonial cosmopolitanism.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781644694206
Publisher: Academic Studies Press
Publication date: 08/10/2021
Series: Imperial Encounters in Russian History
Pages: 480
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 1.06(d)

About the Author

Susan Layton is a research associate at the Centre d’études des mondes russe, caucasien et centre-européen (CERCEC) in Paris. She is the author of Russian Literature and Empire. Conquest of the Caucasus from Pushkin to Tolstoy (1994, ebook 2011) and numerous articles on nineteenth-century Russian literature.

Table of Contents

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-Siècle: Chekhov, Veselitskaya, and Other Writers

Concluding Observations

Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"One of the major contributions of this book lies in how Layton does not limit her subjects to their experiences in Western Europe, and by adding the empire’s exotic regions that beckoned to travellers, the Caucasus and Crimea, she adds to our knowledge of the multiple layers that constructed the imperial imagination. Readers already familiar with Alexander Pushkin’s and Mikhail Lermontov’s Romantic and Orientalist fascinations with the Caucasus will meet the antithesis of their Byronic heroes: Lidia Veselitskaia’s narcissistic, adulterous Mimi. ... Despite the Tolstoyan anathema to the sybaritic traveller who can only appreciate culture as a commodity fetish, Layton singles out three writers who best conform to her more expansive notion of a tourist as an agent of cultural reciprocity: Ivan Turgenev, Alexander Herzen, and Anton Chekhov. Although the first two lived abroad for a good portion of their creative lives, they never allowed their Russian identity to be subsumed by their continental surroundings. True cosmopolitans need not sacrifice a core national identity through their interactions with Others."


— Louise McReynolds, Universityof North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Journal of Tourism History

“This very detailed account of tourist travelogues and works of literature featuring tourism creates a revealing continuum between now fairly obscure writers and extremely well-known ones. Susan Layton provides a synthesizing narrative about the course of the nineteenth century seen through the lens of travel. The practice of, and debate over, tourism sheds new light on major literary and cultural debates, particularly between conservatives and radicals. … The real payoff comes when canonical works are seen in a new context, particularly texts by Dostoevsky, Turgenev, and Tolstoy.”

— Katya Hokanson, Universityof Oregon, Russian Review (October 2022: Vol. 81, No. 4)

“Susan Layton plumbs travelogues, letters, novels, stories, humor, and commentaries to probe why and how nineteenth-century Russians traveled. Her rogue’s gallery of characters features the bookish and the boorish; cultural luminaries who opined on travel for the new middle classes, and tourists who simply dressed up and went. The book’s publication during our twenty-first century pandemic lockdown is timely—a reminder of the historical importance of expanded opportunities to travel and the imprint of travel on the Russian identity.”

—Jeffrey Brooks, Johns Hopkins University, author of The Firebird and the Fox: Russian Culture under Tsars and Bolsheviks

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