Discovering Britain and Ireland in the Romantic Period
Even as members of the social elite participated in the European Grand Tour, travellers, writers, and readers increasingly recognized that Britain and Ireland might offer sights and experiences to rival the continent. This collection examines the practice and representation of tourism on 'home' ground during the period when modern Britain was invented and became a powerful and prosperous imperial nation. Interdisciplinary essays explore the diverse variety of tours and tourist agendas – artistic, industrial, leisure, scientific – and they address the ways in which travellers' 'discovery' of Britain and Ireland was an active and often self-critical process that potentially encompassed encounters with the alien and unfamiliar. Considering travellers from the wider world as well as from within Britain and Ireland, contributors discuss the function of comparative reference in contemporary travel-writing, as tourists often thought with and through others as they reflected on the distinctiveness and significance of the sites that they visited.
- Deploys an interdisciplinary approach to demonstrate the variety in practices and representations of tourism in Britain and Ireland before the railways
- Combats Anglocentrism through a 'four nations' approach to the topic, discussing tourism in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales as well as England, and through inclusion of writings by overseas (including non-European) travellers
- Addresses the topical issue of British and Irish self-understanding in relation to continental Europe and the wider world
Product details
March 2025Hardback
9781108842693
291 pages
236 × 159 × 21 mm
0.58kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction Alison O'Byrne and James Watt
- 1. Discovering Britain and Ireland: Goldsmith's grand tours James Watt
- 2. Frances Burney at the seaside Harriet Guest
- 3. Moving pictures: Thomas Sandby in the East Midlands and Yorkshire John Bonehill
- 4. Watercolour, extreme weather, electricity: Cornelius varley in North Wales 1802-5 Elizabeth Edwards
- 5. 'Another view of Ireland': tourism and war on the 'Irish Road' in 1790s Wales Mary-Ann Constantine
- 6. 'A scene of Terror, Tumult, and Confusion': Irish Gothic Tourism Jim Kelly
- 7. Experimental Tourism: Aesthetics, Science, and World History in the Highlands of Scotland Ian Duncan
- 8. 'Such classic ground': Women and the Romantic-Era Scottish Tour Pam Perkins
- 9. 'Manchester is, as it were, the heart of this vast system': Two Northern Industrial Tours of the 1790s Jon Mee
- 10. 'Diffusive Opulence': Foreign Travellers' views of Romantic London Alison O'Byrne
- 11. Metropolitan Thresholds: Abu Talib, Juliette Récamier, and Touristic Worldmaking Daniel O'Quinn
- Bibliography
- Index.