This book brings together new ideas about how communities, creative producers, and visitors can productively engage with competing notions of experience and authenticity in the tourist environment. It investigates how community interests intersect the desire for more intimate engagements with cultural experiences. Focusing on the way in which communities and visitors 'perform' new forms of cultural tourism, Performing Cultural Tourism is aimed at undergraduate students, researchers, academics, and a diverse range of professionals at both private and government levels that are seeking to develop policies and business plans that recognize and respond to new interests in contemporary tourism.
Auteur
Susan Carson, Associate Professor, teaches and researches in the Creative Industries Faculty at Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia. She received her PhD from the University of Queensland, Brisbane, and now publishes in the fields of cultural tourism, Australian studies and postgraduate pedagogy. Susan's most recent publication in the tourism sector is 'Literature, tourism and the city: Writing and cultural change' with Lesley Hawkes, Kari Gislason and Kate Cantrell in the Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change (2016). She reviews submissions for international journals in the tourism sector as well as for creative industries journals, and is the co-author of a national Australian government Office of Learning and Teaching report into creative practice-led research in Australian universities (2014).
Mark Pennings is a Senior Lecturer in Art History and Theory in Visual Arts in the Creative Industries Faculty of the Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia. Pennings' research interests include visual arts, cultural tourism, the experience economy, cultural and political theory, social and sporting history and pedagogy in international learning. He teaches postwar and contemporary art, and runs study tours to New York City and Tokyo. Pennings has produced many art reviews, catalogue essays and articles in journals such as Art Forum, Art Monthly, Art and Australia and Eyeline. He has presented national and international conference papers in the field of cultural tourism, and is interested in the impact of corporate culture on the infrastructures of tourism in a global experience economy. He has studied art and art museums in experiencescapes, and has examined the role of Museum of Old and New Art (Hobart) and the Gallery of Modern Art (Brisbane) in Australian cultural tourism.
Résumé
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Contenu
List of figures
List of tables
List of contributors
Methodologies of touristic exchange: an introduction
SUSAN CARSON
PART I Cooperation, exchange negotiation: the shared needs of Indigenous communities and cultural tourists
1 'Temporary belonging': Indigenous cultural tourism and community art centres
SALLY BUTLER
2 Saving Sagada
PATRICIA MARIA SANTIAGO
3 Native American communities and community development: the case of Navajo Nation
CHRISTINE N. BUZINDE, VANESSA VANDEVER AND GYAN NYAUPANE
PART II The cultural tourist, social media and self-exploration
4 Investigating the role of virtual peer support in Asian youth tourism
HILARY DU CROS
5 Doing literary tourism - an autoethnographic approach
TIM MIDDLETON
6 Creative cultural tourism development: a tourist perspective
ZHANG YANG AND PHILIP XIE
7 #travelselfie: a netnographic study of travel identity communicated via Instagram
ULRIKE GRETZEL
PART III Cultural precincts, events and managing tourist and community expectations
8 The creative turn: cultural tourism at Australian convict heritage sites
SUSAN CARSON AND JOANNA HARTMANN
9 Cultural tourism and the Olympic movement in Greece
EVANGELIA KASIMATI AND NIKOLAOS VAGIONIS
10 Local/global: David Walsh's Museum of Old and New Art and its impact on the local community and the Tasmanian tourist industry
MARK PENNINGS
Conclusion
SUSAN CARSON AND MARK PENNINGS
Index