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Tourism, Travel, and Blogging

Book

Tourism, Travel, and Blogging

DOI link for Tourism, Travel, and Blogging

Tourism, Travel, and Blogging book

A discursive analysis of online travel narratives

Tourism, Travel, and Blogging

DOI link for Tourism, Travel, and Blogging

Tourism, Travel, and Blogging book

A discursive analysis of online travel narratives
ByDeepti Ruth Azariah
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2016
eBook Published 8 November 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315550688
Pages 192
eBook ISBN 9781315550688
Subjects Geography, Humanities, Language & Literature, Tourism, Hospitality and Events
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Azariah, D.R. (2016). Tourism, Travel, and Blogging: A discursive analysis of online travel narratives (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315550688

ABSTRACT

Travel often inspires the creation of narratives about journeys and destinations, more so with the increasing availability of online platforms, applications for smartphones and tablets, and various other social media technologies. This book examines travel blogs and their associated social media as a form of self-presentation that negotiates the tensions between discourses of travel and tourism. As such, it addresses how contemporary travellers use online platforms to communicate their experiences of journeys and destinations, and how the traveller/tourist dichotomy finds expression in these narratives. Addressing the need for more in-depth analysis through a study of blogs, this exploration of networked narratives of an individual’s travel experience considers personal motivations, self-promotion, and self-presentation as key factors in the creation of both personal and commercial travel blogs. As this text applies concepts such as self-presentation and heteroglossia, it will be of interest to both students and scholars of tourism, new media, sociology, cultural studies, and discourse studies.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|19 pages

Introduction: tourism, travel, and blogging

chapter 2|21 pages

A pioneer in the blogosphere: Tony Wheeler’s Travels

chapter 3|28 pages

The voice(s) in the paratext: presenting the author(s) of sponsored travel blogs

chapter 4|28 pages

With the reader in mind: self-presentation and the independent travel blog

chapter 5|34 pages

Beyond the borders of the blog: the networked self of the independent travel blogger

chapter 6|29 pages

Worth a thousand words (or more): framing the discursive tensions in travel photographs

chapter 7|14 pages

Mapping the travel blog: conclusions on the discourses of travel and tourism

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