Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 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 |