ABSTRACT

Travel and tourism 'stories' have been told and recorded within every culture, in every period of oral and written history, and across the breadth of the fact/fiction continuum. Taking two broad themes as its starting point - travellers and their narratives, and place narratives in travel and tourism - the book has a deliberately wide scope, with different chapters addressing the subject through various relevant 'lenses' and in relation to a number of different contexts. The narratives discussed include both historical and contemporary, as well as 'real-life' and fictional, narratives contained within travel writing, travel and tourism stories and different types of media. In relation to the principal themes of the book, some chapters also explore the importance of collecting memorabilia and image making in the recording, remembering, writing, telling or disseminating of stories about travel and tourism experiences and some examine the ways in which travel and tourism narratives may construct and reinforce personal, collective and place identities. The whole book is marked by an over-arching concern for narrative interpretation as a means of understanding, and providing a new perspective on, travel and tourism.

part I|88 pages

Travellers and their Narratives

chapter 2|14 pages

Travel Narratives of the Victorian Elite

The Case of the London Season

chapter 3|12 pages

A Family of Travellers

chapter 5|16 pages

‘Keeping the Holiday Book’

Travel Stories of a Twentieth-Century English Family

chapter 6|12 pages

Stories and (E)Motions

Travelling in Nicolas Bouvier's Narratives

part II|72 pages

Place Narratives in Travel and Tourism

chapter 8|12 pages

Narrative Cartography in the Eighteenth Century

Defoe's Exploration of Great Britain in the Tour

chapter 9|12 pages

Posting Over Seas

The Travelling Tales of Anthony Trollope

chapter 10|14 pages

Walking the Kumano Pilgrimage Roads (Japan) and Writing Diaries

Narratives in Japanese Travel Culture

chapter 11|16 pages

Narratives and Counter-narratives

Contesting a Tourist Site in Jerusalem