Duration: since 2019
Cruise tourism, which began to emerge in the 1890s, combines the central developments of modern tourism of the 19th century in one tourist product. The project examines cruise tourism to the Mediterranean, Norway and Spitsbergen from standardisation and assembly to the serial production of touristic offers (Enzensberger) and thereby focuses on tourism infrastructure and tourism practice.
In addition to forms of concrete acquisition of the destinations , research also focuses on the function of contemporary places of longing (North Cape, pyramids, Jerusalem) for the touristic mobilisation of the European bourgeoisie.
A wide range of sources offers, just like a kaleidoscope, insights into the beginning of German cruise history, tourism in the 19th century, life on board a cruise ship and the everyday life of tourists and crew. In a publication project with the Osburg Verlag (Hamburg), the history of the first German Mediterranean cruise on the "Augusta Victoria" (1891) is told very closely to and through the people of the time - as a cultural history of early cruise tourism.
Editor: Prof. Dr. Christian Bunnenberg
For the December 2021 issue of the APuZ entitled "Travel and Tourism", Christian Bunnenberg has written an article on "Excursion with consequences. The "Orient Voyage" of the "Augusta Victoria" in 1891 and the history of cruise tourism". Click here to go directly to the article or to the entire issue.