ABSTRACT

Heritage is a prized cultural commodity in the marketing of tourism destinations. Particular aspects of heritage are often more actively promoted, with others played down. The representation of heritage in tourism as static and timeless, derived since time immemorial from a distant past, is seductive. In Asia, a major part of the tourism market lies in the sale and consumption of highly orientalized images and versions of culture and history. In India’s marketing discourse, the state of Rajasthan symbolizes the nation in its heritage-laden, traditional and most authentic form. These images draw heavily on the British period in India - the Raj. In one sense, this vision of Rajasthan is ennobling, highlighting moments of cultural pride. In another sense, it demeans, by omitting and obscuring salient features of contemporary life. This fascinating book explores the cultural politics of tourism through interdisciplinary perspectives. Carol E. Henderson and Maxine Weisgrau demonstrate that tourism heritage privileges elite histories that recapitulate colonial relationships, compelling non-elites to collude in these narratives of subordination even as they advance their own alternative visions of history.

part 1|82 pages

Creating Tourism Narratives of Heritage Across Space and Time

chapter 1|20 pages

Shifting Terrains of Heritage

The Painted Towns of Shekhawati

chapter 2|20 pages

Ghost Towns and Bustling Cities

Constructing a Master Narrative in Nineteenth-Century Jaipur

chapter 3|14 pages

Travel, History, Politics and Heritage

James Tod's ‘Personal Narrative’

chapter 4|22 pages

Virtual Rajasthan

Making Heritage, Marketing Cyberorientalism?

part 2|75 pages

Tourism, Transgression and Shifting Uses of Social Capital

chapter 5|18 pages

Exclusion and Election in Udaipur Urban Space

Implications of Tourism

chapter 6|16 pages

Names, but not Homes, of Stone

Tourism Heritage and the Play of Memory in a Bhat Funeral Feast

chapter 7|18 pages

Sickly Men and Voracious Women

Erotic Constructions of Tourist Identity

chapter 8|18 pages

From Privy Purse to Global Purse

Maharaja Gaj Singh's Role in the Marketing of Heritage and Philanthropy

part 3|61 pages

Tourism and Spiritual Spaces

chapter 9|18 pages

Devotees, Families and Tourists

Pilgrims and Shrines in Rajasthan

chapter 10|20 pages

Tourists, Pilgrims and Saints

The Shrine of Mu'in al-Din Chisti of Ajmer

chapter 11|18 pages

Hindu Nationalism, Community Rhetoric and the Impact of Tourism

The ‘Divine Dilemma' of Pushkar

part |8 pages

Conclusions