ABSTRACT

What does ‘heritage’ mean in the twenty-first century? Traditional ideas of heritage involve places where objects, landscapes, people and ideas are venerated and reproduced over time as an inheritance for future generations. To speak of heritage is to speak of a relationship between the past, the present and the future. However, it is a past recreated for economic gain, hence sectors such as culinary tourism, ecotourism, cultural tourism and film tourism have employed the heritage label to attract visitors.

This interdisciplinary book furthers understanding on how heritage is socially constructed, interpreted and experienced within different geographic and cultural contexts, in both Western and non-Western settings. Subjects discussed include Welsh linguistic heritage, tango, mushroom tourism, Turkish coffee, literary tourism and the techniques employed to construct tourist accommodation. By focusing upon heritage creation in the context of tourism, the book moves beyond traditional debates about ‘authentic heritage’ to focus on how something becomes heritage for use in the present.

This timely volume will be of interest to students and researchers in tourism, heritage studies, geography, museum studies and cultural studies.

chapter 1|12 pages

Heritage for tourism

Creating a link between the past and the present

chapter 2|11 pages

Creating a destination through language

Welsh linguistic heritage in Patagonia

chapter 3|15 pages

Performing national identity in heritage tourism

Observations from Catalonia

chapter 4|11 pages

Heritage defined and maintained through conflict re-enactments

The Estonian Museum of Occupations and the Forest Brothers Bunker

chapter 5|14 pages

Constructing heritage, shaping tourism

Festivals and local heritage governance at Hampi World Heritage Site, Karnataka, India

chapter 7|12 pages

‘It’s tango!’

Communicating intangible cultural heritage for the dance tourist

chapter 8|12 pages

Holmes as heritage

Readers, tourism and the making of Sherlock Holmes’s England

chapter 9|14 pages

Creating heritage for tourism

‘Consuming history,’ ‘prosthetic memories’ and the popularisation of a folk hero’s story

chapter 10|12 pages

Creating (extra)ordinary heritage through film-induced tourism

The case of Dubrovnik and Game of Thrones

chapter 11|13 pages

Amachan

The creation of heritage tourism landscapes in Japan after the 2011 triple disaster

chapter 12|14 pages

Bedrock, metropolis and Indigenous heritage

Rendering ‘The Rocks’ invisible

chapter 13|12 pages

Between the cliffs and the sea

St Kilda and heritage from afar

chapter 14|13 pages

Made in China

Creating heritage through tourist souvenirs

chapter 17|13 pages

Turkish coffee

From intangible cultural heritage to created tourist experience

chapter 19|13 pages

Creating biocultural heritage for tourism

The case of mycological tourism in Central Mexico

chapter 20|15 pages

(Re)creating natural heritage in New Zealand

Biodiversity conservation and tourism development