Description
Book SynopsisResidential Tourism: (De)Constructing Paradise offers the first in-depth, critical exploration of the foreign retirement/expatriate communities proliferating in both size and number throughout Latin America. Amidst the widespread development and promotion of international destinations of residential “paradise” intended for retirement, leisure, and experiences of exotica, this book draws on a diversity of perspectives in order to analyze the social and spatial impacts that dynamic phenomenon has on the people and places it directly affects at the local level. Utilizing the community of Boquete, Panama as a case study, this book examines how two diverse residential groups – the native community who have lived in the area for generations and the foreign residential tourists who have just recently relocated abroad – coexist in a shared place of home, define their experiences of place and community, and confront the mass development of residential tourism in Boquete.
Trade ReviewOverall, the book is a valuable piece of research that is very well written and includes an excellent literature review and the discussion of the qualitative work that helps understand the experiences of residential tourists/local people and the meanings they give to the place/space of the town of Boquete in Panama as a promising residential tourism destination.
-- Salem Harahsheh, Sharjah University, UAE * Tourism Analysis, Vol. 19, pp. 257–260 *
The book is a valuable piece of research that is very well written and includes an excellent literature review and the discussion of the qualitative work that helps understand the experiences of residential tourists/local people and the meanings they give to the place/space of the town of Boquete in Panama as a promising residential tourism destination.
-- Salem Harahsheh, Sharjah University, UAE * Tourism Analysis, Vol. 19, pp. 543–544 *
The research is built on both an excellent analysis of the literature and a solid qualitative research framework. McWatters has produced an excellent, well-written book.
* Paul F. Wilkinson, York University, Canada, in Annals of Tourism Research 36 (3) 2009 *
The concept of residential tourism provides an exciting new dimension in understanding relationships between tourism mobility and the effects of tourists on the locations they consume. In both location and approach this book will be a welcome addition to the tourism and cultural change literature.
* Professor C. Michael Hall, College of Business & Economics, University of Canterbury, New Zealand *
Residential Tourism: (De)Constructing Paradise offers an interesting glimpse into the ongoing evolution of residential tourism in western Panama. Mason McWatters goes beyond the physical effects of residential tourism to examine the broader effects on experiences and meanings of place for tourists and locals. As such, this well-written work will be of interest to those in both the fields of tourism and geography.
* Velvet Nelson, PhD, Sam Houston State University, Texas, USA *
Table of ContentsChapter One: Understanding Residential Tourism
Chapter Two: Spatial Interpretations: Seeing Landscape, Sensing Place
Chapter Three: Locating Boquete in Space and Time
Chapter Four: Longing for Landscape: Assessing Residential Tourists’ Experiences of Boquete
Chapter Five: The Estranging Place: Assessing Native Residents’ Experiences of Boquete
Chapter Six: Conclusion
Appendix One: Boquete: a pueblo that is living the last days of its history. Written by Ulices Urriola
Appendix Two: This is the story of a farmer who sold his land to a foreigner for a great amount of money. Written by Ulices Urriola
Appendix Three: Methodological Notes References