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New Directions in Anthropology - 1: Coping With Tourists

European Reactions to Mass Tourism

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  • 272pagine
  • 10 ore di lettura

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Once content to sunbathe and follow guides and established itineraries, tourists are increasingly seeking authentic culture. This is taking them into the private areas and zones to which the locals retire in order to escape the tourist gaze, creating tensions between the two groups. Based on recent anthropological field studies, this book describes how European communities dependant on tourism have been affected by the commoditization of their culture and explores the ways they cope with the constant attention of outsiders. The collection demonstrates both varied and skillful ways in which individuals and communities react to and cope with the impact of decades of mass tourism on their lives and values, thus throwing new light onto questions of identity, boundary maintenance and cultural adjustment.

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New Directions in Anthropology - 1: Coping With Tourists, Jeremy Boissevain

Lingua
Pubblicato
1996
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Metodi di pagamento

Titolo
New Directions in Anthropology - 1: Coping With Tourists
Sottotitolo
European Reactions to Mass Tourism
Lingua
Inglese
Pubblicato
1996
Formato
In brossura
Pagine
272
ISBN10
1571819002
ISBN13
9781571819000
Serie
Descrizione
Once content to sunbathe and follow guides and established itineraries, tourists are increasingly seeking authentic culture. This is taking them into the private areas and zones to which the locals retire in order to escape the tourist gaze, creating tensions between the two groups. Based on recent anthropological field studies, this book describes how European communities dependant on tourism have been affected by the commoditization of their culture and explores the ways they cope with the constant attention of outsiders. The collection demonstrates both varied and skillful ways in which individuals and communities react to and cope with the impact of decades of mass tourism on their lives and values, thus throwing new light onto questions of identity, boundary maintenance and cultural adjustment.