Description
Book SynopsisGlobal tourism is perhaps the largest scale movement of goods, services, and people in history. Consequently, it is a significant catalyst for economic development and sociopolitical change. While tourism increasingly accounts for ever greater segments of national economies, the consequences of this growth for intercultural interaction are diverse and uncertain. The proliferation of tourists also challenges classic theoretical descriptions of just what an economy is. What are the commodities being consumed? What is the division of labor between producers and clients in creating the value of tourist exchanges? How do culture, power, and history shape these interactions? What are the prospects for sustainable tourism? How is cultural heritage being shaped by tourists around the world? These critical questions inspired this volume in which the contributors explore the connections among economy, sustainability, heritage, and identity that tourism and related processes makes explicit. The v
Trade ReviewLyon (Univ. of Kentucky) and Wells (Univ. of South Florida) deliver a well-put-together collection of essays centered on the anthropology of tourism. Not since Valene Smith and Maryann Brent's edited Hosts and Guests Revisited (CH, Apr'02, 39-4654) has such a volume been written that captures the essence of tourism using ethnographic methods. The 14 chapters are situated within three parts: "Cultural Heritage," "Economic Encounters in Touristic Spheres," and "Redefining Tourism's 'Impact.'" One of the best things about this work is the empirical support for the assertion that self-commodification of tourist goods and services is indeed a dual process, "both an economic response to the global expansion of the service sector and a politically motivated expression of identity." In addition to offering various interesting case studies, the collection seeks to bridge anthropology with the field of tourism....The edited volume will be a good addition to library collections specializing in the anthropology of tourism. Summing Up: Recommended. * CHOICE *
Scholars and students of tourism have long struggled against the common assumption that their subject is somehow trivial in its association with leisure and brief encounters. This volume goes a long way in demonstrating the multiple ways in which global tourism is fundamentally redefining local and regional economies and broadly shaping the ways in which virtually all the world's peoples are learning to re-present their heritage and identity to others. There is nothing trivial about it. -- Erve Chambers, University of Maryland
These [chapters] challenge traditional writings in tourism studies that the editors and others have found to be caught in the bind of rehashing old conceptual orientations to the extent that the ideas are stale and in need of new thinking. The chapters outline these themes in a logical progression to address ideas of heritage, identity, and sustainability from the origins of tourism in particular locals, host/guest encounters, recognition of practices promoting the empowerment of women in tourism, and concerns about the environment through “staycations” to reduce the carbon impact of flying. Questions are carefully posed to engage the reader in the contemporary problems arising in tourism. Who benefits? What does the tourist gain from the experience? Does the practice of staged authenticity destroy the meaning and significance of the original practice or re-enforce understanding for a new generation? What is ecotourism? A refreshing view of these issues is provided through the lens of economic anthropology. -- Sue Taylor, Public Anthropologist in Residence, American University
Table of Contents1- Ethnographies of Global Tourism: Cultural Heritage, Economic Encounters, and the Redefinition of Impact, by Sarah Lyon and E. Christian Wells Part I: Cultural Heritage 2- Shifting Values and Meanings of Heritage: From Cultural Appropriation to Tourism Interpretation and Back, by Noel B. Salazar 3- Mayanizing Tourism on Roatán Island, Honduras: Archaeological Perspectives on Heritage, Development, and Indigeneity, by Alejandro J. Figueroa, Whitney A. Goodwin, and E. Christian Wells 4- Shaping Heritage to Serve Development: Bureaucratic Conflict and Local Agency at Two Chinese Heritage Sites, by Robert Shepherd Part II: Economic Encounters in Touristic Spheres 5- Of Sales Pitches and Speech Genres: Peddling Personality on the Riverfront of Banaras, by Jenny Huberman 6- Tourism as Transaction: Commerce and Heritage on the Inca Trail, by Keely Maxwell 7- Spiritual Spaces, Marginal Places: The Commodification of a Nalú Sacred Grove, by Brandon D. Lundy 8- Becoming Tongan Again: Generalized Reciprocity Meets Tourism in Tonga, by Patricia L. Delaney and Paul A. Rivera 9- Women, Entrepreneurship, and Empowerment: Black-Owned Township Tourism in Cape Town, South Africa, by Katrina T. Greene Part III: Redefining Tourism’s “Impact” 10- Sacrificing Cultural Capital for Sustainability: Identity, Class, and the Swedish Staycation, by Cindy Isenhour 11- Reproductive Tourism: Health Care Crisis Reifies Global Stratified Reproduction, by Amy Speier 12- The Uses of Ecotourism: Articulating Conservation and Development Agendas in Belize, by Laurie Kroshus Medina 13- Who Owns Ecotourism? The Ecoturismo Seri Case, by Diana Luque, Beatriz Camarena, Patricia L. Salido, Moisés Rivera, Eduwiges Gomez, María Cabral, and Rubén Lechuga 14-The Effects of Tour ism and Western Consumption on the Gendered Production and Distribution of Bogolan: Development Initiatives and Malian Women as Agents for Change, by Sarah Lockridge Index About the Editors and Contributors