ABSTRACT

This book presents new directions both for tourism and cultural landscape studies in geography, crossing the traditional boundaries between the research of geographers and scholars of the tourism industry.
Drawing on selected research from Europe, Southeast Asia, the Pacific and North America, the contributors combine perspectives in human geography and tourism to present cultural landscapes of tourist destinations as socially constructed places, examining the extent and manner by which tourism both establishes and falsifies local reality.
The book addresses many critical themes which recent critiques in tourism studies focusing on the attitudes and behaviour of the tourist and on the industry as agents of social change have ignored, including the marginalization of the 'host' community, the privatization and commodification of local culture, and how tourism acts as both agent and process in the structure, identity and meaning of local places.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part |34 pages

Writing the Tourist Landscape

part |125 pages

Destinations

chapter |21 pages

Rewriting Languages of Geography and Tourism

Cultural discourses of destinations, gender and tourism history in the Canadian Rockies 1

chapter |19 pages

Tartan Mythology

The traditional tourist image of Scotland

chapter |14 pages

Making the Pacific

Globalization, modernity and myth

chapter |20 pages

The Social Construction of Tourist Destinations

The process of transformation of the Saariselka tourism region in Finnish Lapland