The Tourist GazeSAGE Publications, 2002 M03 29 - 184 páginas This Second Edition deepens our understanding of how the tourist gaze orders and regulates the relationship with the tourist environment, demarcating the "other" and identifying the "out-of-the-ordinary." It elucidates the relationship between tourism and embodiment and elaborates on the connections between mobility as a mark of modern and postmodern experience and the attraction of tourism as a lifestyle choice. The result is a book that builds on the proven strengths of the First Edition and revitalizes the argument to address the needs of researchers and students in the new century. |
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Página 7
... sense of ' fun , pleasure and entertainment ' has proved a difficult task for social scientists . In this section I ... sense , Turner and Ash suggest , the tourists ' sensuality and aesthetic sense are as restricted as they are in ...
... sense of ' fun , pleasure and entertainment ' has proved a difficult task for social scientists . In this section I ... sense , Turner and Ash suggest , the tourists ' sensuality and aesthetic sense are as restricted as they are in ...
Página 146
... sense of smell , the men of that time doubtless had keen sight . But that was just it . They had not yet set it apart from the other senses ' ( 1982 : 437 ; Cooper , 1997 ) . As a result people were said to live within a fluid world ...
... sense of smell , the men of that time doubtless had keen sight . But that was just it . They had not yet set it apart from the other senses ' ( 1982 : 437 ; Cooper , 1997 ) . As a result people were said to live within a fluid world ...
Página 149
... sense of vision is said to be reduced to a limited array of visible features , it is then exaggerated and dominates the other senses . Hyper - real places are characterised by surface appearances that do not respond to or welcome the ...
... sense of vision is said to be reduced to a limited array of visible features , it is then exaggerated and dominates the other senses . Hyper - real places are characterised by surface appearances that do not respond to or welcome the ...
Contenido
Mass Tourism and the Rise and Fall of the Seaside Resort | 16 |
The Changing Economics of the Tourist Industry | 38 |
Working Under the Tourist Gaze | 59 |
Derechos de autor | |
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activities architecture argues attraction authentic Bagguley beach become Blackpool Britain British buildings capital catering cent central centres Chapter complex conservation constructed consumers consumption contemporary Cook countryside cultural distinct economic employees England English Heritage environment especially example flâneur flexible forms global groups growth heritage Hewison holiday-making images important increase increasingly involved labour Lancashire Lancaster landscape large numbers leisure live London MacCannell malls mass tourism Metrocentre middle class million mobile modern Morecambe museums nature nineteenth century noted objects organised package holidays park particular patterns period photographs places pleasure popular population post-tourist postmodern postmodern architecture production pseudo-events Quarry Bank Mill railway restaurants Routledge seaside resorts sense service class significant societies summarises themed Thomas Cook tour Tourism Concern tourist experience tourist gaze tourist industry Trafford Centre Urry various visitors visual visual perception Walton Wigan World Tourism Organisation