This study considers the implications of the "stereoscopic tours" and Travel System produced by the American photographic concern Underwood & Underwood, c. 1897-1912 from the perspective of social and cultural history. After providing an account of the history of the European and American stereo industries, a cultural-contextual reading of stereoscopic tourism is offered. This reading focuses on two main aspects of late 19 th century American society: middle-class tourism, and burgeoning U.S. expansionism. A conclusion points the way to further study by considering the stereograph's role in the shift towards the visual bias of knowledge
In 1865 in the small northern New Hampshire town of Littleton, Edward and Benjamin West Kilburn foun...
The portrait photograph is such a commonplace in modern American life that it is difficult to imagin...
Naomi Daw examines the relationship between stereoscopic photographs, travel, and the home. Using th...
212 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.My research draws upon the ac...
In 1903, Underwood and Underwood published \u201cItaly through the Stereoscope: Journeys in and abou...
«To travel is to possess the world», according to the renowned motto of E. Burton Holmes (1870-1958)...
During the mid-nineteenth century, stereoscopy became a monumentally popular and heavily studied com...
The stereograph brought the "World" into the parlor. Far-away places and historic happenings; occupa...
Using the framework of the tourist gaze to investigate Underwood & Underwood’s Egypt, a 1905 ste...
While travelling in Greece in 1892, a British tourist wryly commented on a group of tourists arrivin...
The phrase “another dimension” encapsulates the approach taken by this thesis to the visual history ...
Artifact Label: Keystone View Company Tour of the World Meadville, Pa.: Keystone View Company, ca. ...
Despite being commonly referred to as ‘Victorian virtual reality’, the social impact of stereography...
Known as a precursor to three dimensional entertainment, the stereoview photograph is an interesting...
Expected Sights traces the origins of tourism as a distinct category of travel in the United States ...
In 1865 in the small northern New Hampshire town of Littleton, Edward and Benjamin West Kilburn foun...
The portrait photograph is such a commonplace in modern American life that it is difficult to imagin...
Naomi Daw examines the relationship between stereoscopic photographs, travel, and the home. Using th...
212 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.My research draws upon the ac...
In 1903, Underwood and Underwood published \u201cItaly through the Stereoscope: Journeys in and abou...
«To travel is to possess the world», according to the renowned motto of E. Burton Holmes (1870-1958)...
During the mid-nineteenth century, stereoscopy became a monumentally popular and heavily studied com...
The stereograph brought the "World" into the parlor. Far-away places and historic happenings; occupa...
Using the framework of the tourist gaze to investigate Underwood & Underwood’s Egypt, a 1905 ste...
While travelling in Greece in 1892, a British tourist wryly commented on a group of tourists arrivin...
The phrase “another dimension” encapsulates the approach taken by this thesis to the visual history ...
Artifact Label: Keystone View Company Tour of the World Meadville, Pa.: Keystone View Company, ca. ...
Despite being commonly referred to as ‘Victorian virtual reality’, the social impact of stereography...
Known as a precursor to three dimensional entertainment, the stereoview photograph is an interesting...
Expected Sights traces the origins of tourism as a distinct category of travel in the United States ...
In 1865 in the small northern New Hampshire town of Littleton, Edward and Benjamin West Kilburn foun...
The portrait photograph is such a commonplace in modern American life that it is difficult to imagin...
Naomi Daw examines the relationship between stereoscopic photographs, travel, and the home. Using th...