1. Chasing Nellie Bly: the American tourist and speed circumnavigation.
- Author
-
Rutkow, Eric
- Abstract
The innumerable retellings of Nellie Bly's legendary 'race around the world' typically portray her remarkable feat as something of a standalone accomplishment. But she also stimulated a tourist-centred 'speed-circumnavigation' competition that continues into the present. Participants in this informal contest sought to encircle the globe as fast as possible using only regularly scheduled passenger service (though numerous entrants, including Bly herself, would flaunt these rules at crucial moments). This race-around-the-world tourist competition, which arguably preceded Bly by more than a decade, held particular appeal to Americans, who retained control of the unofficial record for more than seventy-five percent of the contest's first century. In total, nearly three dozen 'Nellie Bly runs' have claimed the title of fastest tourist circumnavigation, with almost two-thirds hailing from the United States. This article reconstructs the complete history of this tourist race-around-the-world competition and explores the linkages between 'speed circumnavigation' tourism and American ideals, arguing that these record-setting travellers, both male and female, embodied – and often prefigured – a style of 'liberal internationalism' that would come to dominate American political discourse by the middle of the twentieth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF