Introduction
1 ‘Like a fragment of the old world’: The Historical Regression of Quebec City in Travel Narratives and Tourist Guidebooks, 1776-1913
2 Canadian Pastoral: Promotional Images of British Colonization in Lower Canada's Eastern Townships during the 1830s
3 West Coast Picturesque: Class, Gender, and Race in a British Colonial Landscape, 1858-71
4 Scenic Tourism on the Northeastern Borderland: Lake Memphremagog's Steamboat Excursions and Resort Hotels, 1850-1900
5 Seeing Elemental Nature: An American Transcendentalist On and Off the Coast of Labrador, 1864-65
6 Travels in a Cold and Rugged Land: C.H. Farnham’s Quebec Essays in Harper’s Magazine, 1883-89
7 ‘A fine, hardy, good-looking race of people’: Travellers, Tourism, and the Scots Identity on Cape Breton Island, 1859-1920
8 Picturing a National Landscape: Images of Nature in Picturesque Canada
9 Our Lady of the Snows: Rudyard Kipling’s Imperialist Vision of Canada
10 A Country Without a Soul: Rupert Brooke’s Gothic Vision of Canada
Afterword: An Unknown Country?