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Destinations: Cultural Landscapes of Tourism

Hardback

Main Details

Title Destinations: Cultural Landscapes of Tourism
Authors and Contributors      Edited by Greg Ringer
SeriesRoutledge Advances in Tourism
Series part Volume No. v.3
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:200
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156
Category/GenreTourism industry
Human geography
ISBN/Barcode 9780415149198
ClassificationsDewey:338.4791
Audience
Undergraduate
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations illustrations, 2 line figures, 2 b&w photographs

Publishing Details

Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint Routledge
Publication Date 7 May 1998
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Destinations presents new directions for both tourism and cultural landscape studies in geography, crossing the traditional boundaries between the research of geographers and scholars of the tourism industry. Drawing on selected research from Europe, Southeast Asia, the Pacific and North America, the contributors combine perspectives in human geography and tourism to present cultural landscapes of tourist destinations as socially constructed places, examining the extent and manner by which tourism both establishes and falsifies local reality. Explaining how geographic perspectives about tourist destinations reveal the experience of place for people who live and work in these communities, and examining forces involved in state planning and global economic activities, the authors show how tourism is essentially about the creation and reconstruction of landscapes through manipulations of history and culture. The 'destination', as configured in a tourist's mind, thereby differs from the 'actual'. Destinations addresses many critical themes which recent critiques in tourism studies focusing on the attitudes and behaviour of the tourist and on the industry as agents of social change have ignored, including the marginalization of the 'host' community, the privatization and commodification of local culture, and how tourism acts as both agent and process in the structure, identity and meaning of local places. The authors reveal how geographic conceptualizations of tourist landscapes can constructively anticipate the range of changes wrought on emergent destinations. Greg Ringer, University of Oregon, USA; Richard Butler, University of Surrey, UK; Judith Cukier, University of Waikato, New Zealand; Jacqueline Grekin, McGill Tourism Resea