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E-grāmata: Tourist Attractions: From Object to Narrative

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Tourism and Cultural Change
  • Izdošanas datums: 10-Sep-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Channel View Publications
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781845415433
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Tourism and Cultural Change
  • Izdošanas datums: 10-Sep-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Channel View Publications
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781845415433
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Tourist attractions constitute the metaphorical 'heart' of tourism. This book aims to both deconstruct and construct what tourist attractions are, how we perceive them and how we can enhance our understanding of what attracts us as tourists. The volume reaches beyond current ideas about the ways tourist attractions are created, shaped and packaged. It focuses on the importance and subjective nature of identity, memory, narrative and performance in the tourist experience to find new ways of analysing and managing tourist attractions. The book will appeal to researchers and students in tourism and destination management and heritage and indigenous tourism.



Tourist attractions constitute the metaphorical 'heart' of tourism. This book aims to both deconstruct and construct what tourist attractions are, how we perceive them and how we can enhance our understanding of what attracts us as tourists.

Recenzijas

This book is a milestone for tourism research. It makes post-modern thought accessible for both mature students and managers and meticulously applies theory to practice through worked examples. Both Husserls phenomenology and Rojeks constructivism come alive and challenge the practitioner to identify how destination and tourist co-create the attraction. -- Juergen Gnoth, University of Otago, New Zealand This clearly detailed book makes an immensely valuable contribution by providing two distinct but complementary perspectives that are rarely encountered together: comprehensive knowledge of the ways in which attractions are defined, managed and studied, followed by critical analysis that helps to identify the socially symbolic meanings and political agenda that surround them. Both are jointly essential for responsible development and management of tourism attractions. -- Tazim Jamal, Texas A&M University, USA A fascinating and, at times, provocative combination of personal and theoretical insights into tourist attractions and their place within broader cultural contexts. An examination of tourist attractions from an alternative perspective, thus making this a relevant read for those studying, managing and experiencing tourist attractions in all their variety of form. -- Anna Leask, Edinburgh Napier University, UK The book was an enjoyable read, which provided very deep insights into how tourists and managers use, perceive and understand attractions.  -- Brian Hay, Heriot-Watt University, UK * Journal of Tourism Futures, 2018 * This innovative text provides a fresh perspective on attractions and provides the reader with a unique toolkit to explore tourist attractions through the use of narrative analysis. -- Ellis Urquhart, Edinburgh Napier University, UK * Tourism Analysis, Vol. 22 * This book is an invaluable resource for anyone involved in Tourism Studies, including tourist attractions, destinations, marketing, interpretation, text writing and research methods. Practitioners, academics and students will benefit from this book immensely as it offers a rich resource at a methodological as well as at a practical ad applied level. It is a delight to read, and causes many pauses for reflection. -- Claire Béréziat, Glasgow Caledonian University, UK * Tourism Management 60 (2017) *

Figures, Tables and Boxes
viii
Acknowledgements x
Prologue: `So, What's Wrong With the Old Way?' xi
The Bushranger and the Big Banana xiv
The Aim of This Book xvi
A Rationale for Using Narrative Analysis xvii
What Makes a Phenomenological Study Relevant and Reliable? xviii
Validities xx
Structure of the Book xxii
Part 1 Tourist Attractions
1(82)
1 Defining TAs
3(30)
Tourist Attractions or Visitor Attractions?
5(4)
Tourist Attraction Categories and Typologies
9(5)
Definitions of TAs
14(6)
The TA System
20(6)
Poststructural Narrative Analysis
26(5)
Conclusion
31(2)
2 Managing TAs
33(27)
The TA Management Paradox
34(4)
Quadruple Bottom Line -- Infrastructure and Local Distinctiveness
38(3)
Success Factors -- Good Practice
41(5)
White Elephants -- Or How Not to Plan and Manage TAs
46(3)
Managing Individual Tourist Experiences
49(5)
Phenomenological Aims -- My Methodology
54(4)
Conclusion
58(2)
3 Maintaining TAs
60(23)
Fulfilling Tourists' Expectations -- The Power of Marketing
61(3)
Planning and Designing of TAs
64(2)
Challenges for TAs
66(9)
Quality Assurance and Benchmarking in the TA Sector
75(3)
Revenue Creation
78(3)
Conclusion
81(2)
Part 2 Deconstructing TAs
83(76)
Interlude A
83(2)
4 Reading TAs
85(26)
Attraction Markers/Texts
86(6)
Narrative Synthesising Places
92(3)
Terminology Used in Narrative Analysis of TAs
95(2)
Diegesis of Thunderbolt
97(6)
The Big Banana
103(6)
Conclusion
109(2)
5 Forming TAs
111(24)
Pre-travel and On-travel Narrative Consumption
111(3)
Diachronic, Synchronic and Anachronic Narratives
114(8)
Narrative Voice
122(12)
Conclusion
134(1)
6 Forging TAs
135(24)
Hegemonic Messages in Heritage Attractions
136(1)
Focalisation
137(10)
Fear of Falling
147(2)
Narrative Tempo
149(4)
A `Touristic Terra Nullius'
153(4)
Conclusion
157(2)
Part 3 Constructing TAs
159(67)
Interlude B
159(4)
7 Experiencing TAs
163(22)
Phenomenology in General
164(4)
Phenomenology and Cartesian Dualism
168(2)
Hermeneutic Phenomenology
170(7)
Linguistic Phenomenology
177(4)
Phenomenology in Tourism and Leisure Studies
181(3)
Conclusion
184(1)
8 Performing TAs
185(25)
Tourist Identities -- Authentic Performances?
185(3)
Uralla Visitor Information Centre -- Thunderbolt
188(4)
Tourism Performance
192(4)
Tamara and Suspension of Disbelief
196(7)
Hegemony of Vision
203(4)
The Thunderbolt Experience
207(3)
9 Remembering TAs
210(16)
Memories
210(1)
The Big Banana
211(4)
Souvenirs
215(6)
The Gift Shop
221(2)
A Meaning of the Big Banana
223(3)
Epilogue
226(5)
Every TA is a New Narrative
226(1)
Every Tourist is a Phenomenologist
227(2)
Limitations of the Research
229(1)
Where to Now?
230(1)
References 231(22)
Index 253
Johan R. Edelheim is Director of the Multidimensional Tourism Institute (MTI), Finland. His research interests within tourism and hospitality include education, linguistics and cultural issues. He is an executive member of the Tourism Education Futures Initiative (TEFI).