ABSTRACT

Increasingly significant as mediators of spatial identity and meaning, leisure, tourism, culture and heritage are only now beginning to be located within the rapidly evolving discourses of poststructuralist geographies.

Exploring the influence of leisure and tourism on the production, representation and consumption of landscape, the first half of this important book focuses on different ways of ‘seeing’ or representing landscape, whereas the second half examines different forms of productive consumption in leisure and tourism. Both symbolic and material spaces of leisure and tourism are also examined in relation to urban and rural landscapes, heritage landscapes, gendered landscapes, and landscapes of sexuality and desire.

With a multidisciplinary approach and a strong theoretical content which builds on poststructuralist theories, this is undoubtedly an important addition to literature in the field.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|22 pages

Locating landscapes

Geographies of leisure and tourism

chapter 3|21 pages

Moving landscapes

Leisure and tourism in time and space

chapter 4|22 pages

Valuing the countryside

Leisure, tourism and the rural landscape

chapter 5|22 pages

Representing landscapes

Literary and artistic ways of seeing

chapter 6|16 pages

Heritage landscapes

Merging past and present

chapter 7|26 pages

Gendered landscapes

Constructing and consuming leisure and tourism

chapter 8|25 pages

Retrophilia and the urban landscape

Reinterpreting the city

chapter 9|9 pages

Landscapes of desire

Reappropriating the city

chapter 10|3 pages

Relocating landscapes

Leisure, tourism and culture