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The Second Greatest Disappointment: Honeymooning and Tourism at Niagara Falls

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A lively and wide-ranging work on the history of the North American honeymoon, and, of necessity, the tourist industry at Niagara Falls. Dubinsky charts the growth of Niagara Falls as a tourist destination from the 1850s to the 1960s and explains how it acquired its reputation as the "Honeymoon Capital of the World." Ultimately, the author asks: Of all the ways to promote a waterfall, why honeymoons? Winner of the 2000 Albert B. Corey prize from the Canadian Historical Association and the American Historical Association for the best book in Canadian-American history.

304 pages, Paperback

First published January 28, 1999

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About the author

Karen Dubinsky

10 books1 follower
Karen Dubinsky teaches in the departments of Global Development Studies and History at Queen's University. She has published and edited books on a wide variety of topics, including the history of gender and sexuality in Canada (Improper Advances: Rape and Heterosexual Conflict in Ontario, 1880-1929 and The Second Greatest Disappointment: Honeymooners, Heterosexuality and the Tourist Industry at Niagara Falls; the global 1960s (New World Coming: The Sixties and the Shaping of Global Consciousness; adoption and child migration in Canada, Cuba and Guatemala (Babies Without Borders: Adoption and Migration Across the Americas); the politics of music in Cuba (My Havana: The Musical City of Carlos Varela). She has co-edited two recent anthologies about Canada and the world (Within and Without the Nation: Transnational Canadian History and Canada and the Third World: Overlapping Histories). Her most recent book is Cuba Beyond the Beach: Stories of Life in Havana.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Katie.
126 reviews3 followers
November 27, 2025
Building on the concept of "imagined geographies" and the "tourist gaze", gender historian Karen Dubinsky uses the city of Niagara Falls to explore how physical geography, industry, and ideas around gender and sexuality converge to turn Niagara Falls into one of Canada's number one tourist and honeymoon destinations. Tracing tourism in Niagara Falls from the nineteenth to the end of the twentieth century, Dubinsky provides a complicated history of the city and how its geographical features (the fall themselves) lend in ideas around nature, sex, and romance and how this association help build the tourist/honeymoon industry. The strength in this book lies in Dubinsky's tracing of honeymoon customs as they moved from a semi-exclusive but public practice, towards being middle-class and private, to, eventually, widely accessible and public. In the tracing the structures of the honeymoon, Dubinsky also outlines the ways our ideas around sex, heterosexuality, and marriage have shifted throughout the century, and how that, in turn, also plays into the honeymoon tourist market.
Profile Image for Dasha.
570 reviews16 followers
May 19, 2023
Central to Dubsiky's analysis of the falls is the concept of "imagined geographies," in which landscapes take on cultural meanings, and in the case of the falls, Dubinsky highlights the gendered and sexual imagery associated with falls. She also traces the history of the honeymoon and tourism in Canada and how these developments impacted Niagara as a mass tourist spot. Dubsinky leaves off on the question as to whether the Falls will adapt once more and embrace it's "camp" aesthetic and become a queer spot, a clear deviation from its heterosexual past.
Profile Image for Chuck.
10 reviews1 follower
Read
June 8, 2012
It's like oil and vinegar trying to tie in heterosexuality into tourism at Niagara Falls; it's not good unless it's shaken up a bit.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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