Mineral Springs Resorts in Global Perspective

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Australian Spas
Ball Room
Booth Line
Caldas De
Category=JHBS
Category=NHTB
Colonic Irrigation
De Vichy
Eighteenth Century Bath
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Fernando VII
Harris Stone
Health
health and wellness travel
Hepburn Springs
historical spa culture
History
hydrotherapy history
King Richard III
Leisure
Main Street USA
Mineral Springs
Mineral Springs Resorts
Napoleon III
nineteenth century European spa research
Regional Health Programmes
Saratoga Springs
Scottish Hydros
Sea Bathing
sociability and politics
Spa Histories
Spa Medicine
Spa Resort
Spa resorts
thermal tourism
Tourism
Tourist Area Life Cycle
Trienio Liberal
urban leisure studies
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415825610
  • Weight: 566g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jul 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Spa resorts were a favoured destination for affluent seekers after health and comfortable leisure in opulent surroundings from the seventeenth to the twentieth century, although in the railway age they began to suffer from competition from new fashions in leisure and tourism, especially the seaside holiday. During their heyday the leading spa resorts became hotbeds of political and diplomatic intrigue, and gathering-points for high society. As such, they also became important businesses, and distinctive, carefully-managed urban environments. ‘Taking the waters’ at a mineral springs resort fell into eclipse over much of the Western world in the mid-twentieth century, only to revive in more diffuse guise as ‘health and wellness tourism’ in the new millennium.

This book examines an important body of practices and experiences from the perspectives of health, pleasure, conspicuous consumption and display, urban governance, culture and politics across a quarter of a millennium, drawing its examples not only from the British Isles, France, Spain and Central Europe, but also from the United States and Australia. An international team of distinguished historians puts this neglected theme back on the historical map, at a time when spas and their treatments have never been so popular and visible in contemporary society.

This book was published as a special issue of the Journal of Tourism History.

John K. Walton is an IKERBASQUE research professor in the Department of Contemporary History, University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Bilbao, Spain. He edited Histories of Tourism (Clevedon: Channel View, 2005) and continues to publish extensively, and internationally, on histories of tourism, sport, popular culture and regional/ national identities, especially in Britain and Spain.