With the vast majority of academic theory on tourism based on Western tourists, Asia on Tour illustrates why the rapid growth of travel for leisure and recreation in Asia demands a reappraisal of how tourism is analyzed and understood. Examining domestic and intra-regional tourism, the book reveals how improvements in infrastructures, ever increasing disposable incomes, liberalized economies, the inter-connectivities of globalization and the lowering of borders, both physical and political, are now enabling millions of Asians to travel as tourists. Drawing upon multidisciplinary theoretical perspectives and up-to-date empirical research, the twenty-three accessible essays in this volume indicate why a rigorous and critical study of Asian tourism must become integral to both our analysis of this rapidly transforming region and our interpretation of global tourism in the twenty first century.
As a rich collection of essays on heritage and tourism oriented around Asian tourists, Asia on Tour will be of particular interest to students and scholars working in the fields of tourism, Asian studies, geography, heritage, anthropology, development, sociology, and cultural and postcolonial studies.
Recenzijas
'Asia on Tour is a valuable addition to the slowly growing discourse on non-Western tourist behaviour. It does so by highlighting the interactions between Asian tourism cultures, which are played out according to the cultural backgrounds of the participants. Included are a large number of well-researched examples, which are analysed using the common insight that the tourist of MacCannell and Urry is in fact a Western tourist.' - Wolfgang Georg Arlt, Journal of Heritage Tourism, Vol. 4, November 2009
'This volume provides a lot of thoughtprovoking insight into contemporary issues that not only affect the individual countries and communities that the chapters focus on, but also could be extended comparatively to other Asian countries and regions as well. As such, the book serves as both a useful reference and a guide to tourism in and of Asia today.' Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, Vol. 31, No.2, July 2010
"The book is to be welcomed as a contribution to the growing works about Asian tourism and is generally free from the dry statistics on the growing numbers of visitors or exhortations about the importance of Asian tourism. This is a book that I can gladly recommend to those interested in tourism in Asia." Chris Ryan, Pacific Affairs: Volume 83, No. 3 September 2010
Introduction: Rethinking Tourism in Asia Tim Winter, Peggy Teo and T.C.
Chang Part 1: Challenging Conventions
1. 'A Long and Still-Unfinished Story':
Constructing and Defining Asian Regionalisms C. Michael Hall
2. Knowledge
Order in Asia Peggy Teo
3. Destination Asia: Rethinking Material Culture
Tim Winter
4. Disorganized Tourism Space: Chinese Tourists in an Age of Asian
Tourism Chan Yuk Wah Part 2: Emerging Markets, (Re)scripting Places
5.
Singapores Postcolonial Landscape: Boutique Hotels as Agents Peggy Teo and
T.C. Chang
6. The Rebirth of the Hospital: Heterotopia and Medical Tourism in
Asia Audrey Bochaton and Bertrand LeFebvre
7. Affective Sites: Hur Jin-Hos
Cinema and Film-Induced Tourism in Korea Youngmin Choe
8. Affinity Tourism:A
Case Study of Indian Tourists in Bali K. Thirumaran
9. Ayurvedic Tourism in
Kerala: Local Identities and Global Markets Denise SpitzerPart 3: National
Imaginings and Tourism Development
10. Between Encouragement and Control:
Tourism, Modernity and Discipline in China Pįl Nyķri 11.Tourism as Glitter:
Re-examining Domestic Tourism in Indonesia Maribeth Erb
12. Openings and
Limits: Domestic Tourism in Japan Nelson Graburn
13. Disruptions of a
Dialectic and a Stereotypical Response: The Case of the Ho Chi Minh City,
Vietnam, Tourism Industry Jamie Gillen
14. The Internal Expansion of China:
Tourism and the Production of Distance Jenny Chio Part 4: Revis(it)ing
Heritage: Dissonance or Harmony?
15. From the Centre to the Margin: Tourism
and Conflict in Kashmir Shalini Panjabi
16. Staging the Nation, Exploring
the Margins: Domestic Tourism and its Political Implications in Northern
Thailand Olivier Evrard and Prasit Leepreecha
17. Cultural Preservation,
Tourism, and Donkey Travel on Chinas Frontier Robert Shepherd
18.
Gastronomy and Tourism:A Case Study of Gourmet Country-Style Cuisine in Hong
Kong Sidney C. H. Cheung Part 5: Tourism and New Social Networks
19. My
Mothers Best Friends Sister-in-Law is Coming with Us: Domestic and
International Travels with a Group of Lao Tourists Charles Carroll
20.
Donkey Friends in China: The Internet, Civil Society and the Emergence of
the Chinese Backpacking Community Francis Khek Gee Lim
21. Still Vision and
Mobile Youth: Tourist Photos, Travel Narratives and Taiwanese Modernity
Joyce Hsiu-yen Yeh
22. Conclusion: Recasting Tourism Theory, Towards an Asian
Future Tim Winter
Tim Winter is a Professor in the School of Social Sciences at The University of Western Australia. He is author of Post-Conflict Heritage, Postcolonial Tourism and editor of Expressions of Cambodia. Peggy Teo is an independent scholar based in Singapore. Her research interests are in tourism and social gerontological issues. TC Chang is Associate Professor at the Department of Geography, National University of Singapore.