ABSTRACT

The complex relationship between heritage places and people, in the broadest sense, can be considered dialogic, a communicative act that has implications for both sides of the ‘conversation’. This is the starting point for Heritage and Tourism . However, the ‘dialogue’ between visitors and heritage sites is complex. ‘Visitors’ have, for many decades, become synonymous with ‘tourists’ and the tourism industry and so the dialogic relationship between heritage place and tourists has produced a powerful critique of this often contested relationship.

Further, at the heart of the dialogic relationship between heritage places and people is the individual experience of heritage where generalities give way to particularities of geography, place and culture, where anxieties about the past and the future mark heritage places as sites of contestation, sites of silences, sites rendered political and ideological, sites powerfully intertwined with representation, sites of the imaginary and the imagined.

Under the aegis of the term ‘dialogues’ the heritage/tourism interaction is reconsidered in ways that encourage reflection about the various communicative acts between heritage places and their visitors and the ways these are currently theorized, so as to either step beyond – where possible – the ontological distinctions between heritage places and tourists or to re-imagine the dialogue or both. Heritage and Tourism is thus an important contribution to understanding the complex relationship between heritage and tourism.

part I|38 pages

The intimacy of encounters

chapter 2|19 pages

Gateway and garden

A kind of tourism in Bali

chapter 3|18 pages

Authorising the unauthorised

Liquidity, complexity and the heritage-tourist in the era of social media

part II|64 pages

Heritage, tourists and the work of representation

chapter 5|18 pages

Swords, sandals and togas

The cinematic imaginary and the tourist experiences of Roman heritage sites

chapter 6|24 pages

Country matters

The rural–historic as an authorised heritage discourse in England

part III|44 pages

Tourism and performance at heritage places

chapter 7|24 pages

Cuzcotopia

Imagining and performing the Incas

part IV|55 pages

Heritage, ‘tradition', tourism and the politics of change

chapter 9|15 pages

Cultures of interpretation

chapter 10|26 pages

Heritage for sale

Indigenous tourism and misrepresentations of voice in northern Chile

chapter 11|13 pages

Discourses of development

Narratives of cultural heritage as an economic resource