Popular Culture Review Vol. 10, No. 2, August 1999 | Page 20

14 Popular Culture Review whether any of us can approach the same sense of wonder-the authentic sense of discovery-that the first Spanish explorer, Garcia Lopez de Cardenas, felt upon his encounter. Using “P” to denote the value of the authentic discovery, Percy asserts, “if the place is seen by a million sightseers, a single sightseer does not receive value P but a millionth part of value P” (46). The primary reason for this devalu ation is not the numbers of tourists, necessarily, but the amount of information that we unavoidably carry with us as we go to the canyon. We are burdened by a complex, deeply-rooted collection of data that creates in us expectations of “The Grand Canyon”-an image, an idea, not a physical phenomenon. We can see the canyon not for what it is but for what we have been told it is. The “symbolic machinery” that creates our expectations and informs us also causes a “loss of sovereignty.” We are, therefore, no longer in charge of our experience, and the more we travel, the more we lose the horizon. Though we should probably apply Percy’s value “P” not to a Spanish explorer but to an unknown native American, his example still illustrates intuitively that the trouble with tourism, in this sense, is the trouble with travel. It affects anyone who follows another, and, with very few exceptions, we are followers. Again, this frustration is not a new one. Mark Twain, in The Innocents Abroad (1869), the remarkable nar- rative of America’s first pleasure cruise, confronts the issue as he tours Rome: What is it that confers the noblest delight? What is that which swells a man’s breast with pride above that which any other experience can bring to him? Discovery! To know that you are walking where none others have walked; that you are be holding what human eye has not seen before; that you are breath ing a virgin atmosphere....To be thefirst—that is the idea. (266) In celebrating the thrill of discovery, Twain also recognizes that for the touristeven at the beginning of the Tourist Age-such a feeling is unavailable. He contin ues, “[w]hat is there in Rome for me to see that others have not seen before me? What is there for me to touch that others have not touched? What is there for me to feel, to learn, to hear, to know, that shall thrill me before it passes to others? What can I discover?-Nothing. Nothing whatsoever” (267). So what is the tourist to do? To try to answer this question, we can begin by altering one of Shakespeare’s most memorable lines and applying it to the Tourist Age: all the world is a sight, and we are merely tourists. This petty theft may help illustrate an important point about the nature of the tourist experience, that, like Shakespeare’s original assertion, via the character Jacques, that the world is a “stage” and we are “players,” sights and tourists also require playacting. The search for authenticity in this late phase of the Age of Tourism relies on-for better or for