Club Red. Vacation Travel and the Soviet Dream - Diane P. Koenker
226 Chapter 6 In addition to creating their own local itineraries, oblast tourism agencies also sponsored their own long-distanc ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 227 During the 1960s, the expansion of tourism opportunities took many forms: new hotels and tourist ba ...
228 Chapter 6 below, almost all foreign tourist trips originated from Moscow; for many So- viet tourists this provided their fi ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 229 “The Great Beyond”: Expanding Domestic Destinations As public agencies whose operating revenues dep ...
230 Chapter 6 and itineraries in Belorussia and Moldavia in the west; Kirgizia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan in Cent ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 231 Tourist excursion by open touring cars to Lake Ritsa in the mountains above Sukhumi. S. V. Kurashov ...
232 Chapter 6 passengers participated in a nighttime hike to a picturesque pass; another 350 opted to visit Lake Ritsa, always o ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 233 Train tourists left positive comments, just as did most visitors to sanatoria and rest homes. We no ...
234 Chapter 6 service of tourism to replace the cramped and schedule-driven freight boats of the 1930s and early 1950s. Tourists ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 235 local initiative, the Sochi excursion bureau and others also organized their own sailings between t ...
236 Chapter 6 Compared with other types of tours (see table 6.3), these cruises were priced in the same range as river cruises, ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 237 the right channel—toward learning about historical places, like places con- nected with the victory ...
238 Chapter 6 tours. The auto enthusiasts’ journal Behind the Wheel ( Za Rulem ) instructed readers on how to convert their Pobe ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 239 trade union or tourism authorities. Fishing and hunting cabins proliferated on rivers and lakes and ...
240 Chapter 6 offi cials ventured beyond Soviet borders in the fi rst decade after the end of hostilities. All of this changed q ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 241 combine sedentary rest in a spa or on the Black Sea coast with limited urban sightseeing. Travel ab ...
242 Chapter 6 G. P. Dolzhenko asserts that a half million tourists traveled abroad in 1956 alone, but Anne Gorsuch suggests that ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 243 therefore occupied a large space. But the reports were not merely about sur- veillance: they also p ...
244 Chapter 6 that the republics of Central Asia are independent republics, not backwards as they were forty years ago.”^97 For ...
Post-proletarian Tourism 245 of them wished to witness socialist modernity and not the bourgeois Eu- ropean past. Presented with ...
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