Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 298
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-2876-5 • Paperback • March 2006 • $60.00 • (£46.00)
978-1-4616-4637-2 • eBook • March 2006 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
Claudio Minca is professor of human geography at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne.
Tim Oakes is associate professor of geography at the University of Colorado.
Chapter 1 Preface: Places and Performances
Chapter 2 Introduction: Traveling Paradoxes
Chapter 3 Sensing Tourism Spaces
Chapter 4 Circulation and Emplacement: The Hollowed-out Performance of Tourism
Chapter 5 Itinerary and the Tourist Experience
Chapter 6 Heimat Tourism in the Countryside: Paradoxical Sojourns to Self and Place
Chapter 7 Three Trips to Italy: Deconstructing the New Las Vegas
Chapter 8 Tourist Places and Negotiating Modernity: European Women and Romance Tourism in the Sinai
Chapter 9 Re-inventing the "Square": Postcolonial Geographies and Tourist Narratives in Jamaa el Fna, Marrakech
Chapter 10 Portable Autonomous Zones: Tourism and the Travels of Dissent
Chapter 11 Terror and Tourism: Charting the Ambivalent Allure of the Urban Jungle
Chapter 12 Get Real! On Being Yourself and Being a Tourist
It is unusual to encounter a volume that actually advances the gigantic discourse on tourism. This one does it. Via a series of theoretically informed but non-doctrinaire studies of the ways tourists inflect places and vice-versa we get a glimpse of the future of tourism studies. Smart, readable, and essential for every tourist and tourism researcher.
— Dean MacCannell, University of California, Davis
Appropriately illustrated and well footnoted, the volume also has an excellent bibliography....Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
Highly recommended for all cultural geographers, anthropologists, and sociologists of tourism.
— H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online
Well worth reading. It could be appropriately used in a graduate course devoted to tourism and should be useful and thought provoking to tourism and travel scholars in the social sciences.
— American Anthropologist
This book marks the coming-of-age of new narratives of tourism, travel, and place. Each chapter is a vital part of a whole that presents an exciting new field of research and a set of compelling insights into the pressing problems that the paradoxes of travel have generated.
— Nigel Thrift, Oxford University