ABSTRACT

Redefining 'community' and considering the effects tourism has on culture, this detailed book delivers an ethnographic account of both the toured and touring community in Göreme, central Turkey.

Hazel Tucker presents an in-depth analysis of the interactions between tourists, the local community and place. She demonstrates the implications that community ownership and participation in tourism have for the politics of representation and identity, and also for the nature of the tourist experience. Dealing with contentious theoretical issues related to globalization and culture, Tucker challenges contemporary thinking relating to tourism authenticity and cultural sustainability, and shows how, together with host communities, tourists themselves are continuously negotiating their own identities and experiences in interaction with the people and places they meet.

This fascinating book develops a dynamic notion of culture and tourism sustainability, providing new insights not only for scholars of tourism, but also for those in the areas of anthropology, geography and social studies who wish to gain a deeper understanding of this global phenomenon in the contemporary world.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

part |1 pages

Notes

chapter 2|11 pages

Imaging Cappadocia

The construction of a tourist place

chapter |9 pages

Göreme as a cultural landscape

chapter 3|8 pages

The tourists

In search of serendipity

chapter |8 pages

Temporal opening to possibility

part 4|1 pages

Continuity and change

chapter |5 pages

Göreme lives

chapter |15 pages

Göremeli/people of Göreme

part |1 pages

Notes

chapter 5|23 pages

A community in competition

The business of tourism in Göreme

part 6|1 pages

Close encounters

chapter |15 pages

Packaged interaction

chapter 7|4 pages

Romantic developments

New and changing gender relations through tourism

chapter |8 pages

Traditional gender relations

chapter |10 pages

Caught in the middle

chapter 8|23 pages

The continuation of Göreme as a ‘tourist site’

Politics of place and identity

chapter 9|8 pages

Conclusion

Writing tourists into destinations