At the heart of "tourismophobia", past and present, is the question of the masses and the differentiation between those who call themselves "travellers", denying their own tourism, and tourists. Tourismophobia studies the persistence of the repulsion for them, and though their number is infinitely greater today, they are no longer socially the same and practices have radically changed. This book brings this cultural invariant out of the shadows to understand the driving forces behind this social posture, which has taken a new turn with climate change. Without overlooking the negative effects…mehr
At the heart of "tourismophobia", past and present, is the question of the masses and the differentiation between those who call themselves "travellers", denying their own tourism, and tourists. Tourismophobia studies the persistence of the repulsion for them, and though their number is infinitely greater today, they are no longer socially the same and practices have radically changed. This book brings this cultural invariant out of the shadows to understand the driving forces behind this social posture, which has taken a new turn with climate change. Without overlooking the negative effects of tourism, this book is a response to the current debate on "overtourism", which is the most contemporary form of tourismophobia.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Jean-Christophe Gay is a geographer and a full professor at the IAE Nice, Graduate School of Management (Université Côte d'Azur, France). He is a member of the URMIS laboratory and is Scientific Director of the Institut du Tourisme Côte d'Azur.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments vii Introduction ix Chapter 1 Allegations 1 1.1 Unsustainable exponential growth 2 1.2 Overtourism 3 1.3 A form of colonization 9 1.4 An outcry against cruise ships 12 1.5 Conclusion 16 Chapter 2 Inventions 17 2.1 Original sin 17 2.2 Tourism versus travel 20 2.3 The sententious elite 27 2.4 Conclusion 31 Chapter 3 Distinctions 33 3.1 The crowd and the masses 34 3.2 "Happy few" 41 3.3 Too easy! 48 3.4 Conclusion 55 Chapter 4 Discriminations 57 4.1 "Refugees welcome, Tourist go home!" 58 4.2 Anglophobia 62 4.3 Misogyny 67 4.4 Conclusion 72 Chapter 5 Illusions 73 5.1 Nostalgia 73 5.2 The good old days 76 5.3 The feeling of being too late 79 5.4 Urbanophobia 83 5.5 Conclusion 91 Chapter 6 Alienations 93 6.1 Conditioned beings 94 6.2 It is all fake 98 6.3 Egotourism 103 6.4 Tourism posture 106 6.5 Conclusion 110 Chapter 7 Omissions 111 7.1 Half-measures 111 7.2 Who remembers the Minister of Tourism? 116 7.3 Tourism and academia 120 7.4 The Bourdieu mystery 126 7.5 Conclusion 131 Chapter 8 Injunctions 133 8.1 Sustainable tourism 134 8.2 What about your carbon footprint? 139 8.3 Whose turn is it? 143 8.4 Conclusion 145 Conclusion 147 References 155 Index of Common Nouns 161 Index of Proper Nouns 163
Acknowledgments vii Introduction ix Chapter 1 Allegations 1 1.1 Unsustainable exponential growth 2 1.2 Overtourism 3 1.3 A form of colonization 9 1.4 An outcry against cruise ships 12 1.5 Conclusion 16 Chapter 2 Inventions 17 2.1 Original sin 17 2.2 Tourism versus travel 20 2.3 The sententious elite 27 2.4 Conclusion 31 Chapter 3 Distinctions 33 3.1 The crowd and the masses 34 3.2 "Happy few" 41 3.3 Too easy! 48 3.4 Conclusion 55 Chapter 4 Discriminations 57 4.1 "Refugees welcome, Tourist go home!" 58 4.2 Anglophobia 62 4.3 Misogyny 67 4.4 Conclusion 72 Chapter 5 Illusions 73 5.1 Nostalgia 73 5.2 The good old days 76 5.3 The feeling of being too late 79 5.4 Urbanophobia 83 5.5 Conclusion 91 Chapter 6 Alienations 93 6.1 Conditioned beings 94 6.2 It is all fake 98 6.3 Egotourism 103 6.4 Tourism posture 106 6.5 Conclusion 110 Chapter 7 Omissions 111 7.1 Half-measures 111 7.2 Who remembers the Minister of Tourism? 116 7.3 Tourism and academia 120 7.4 The Bourdieu mystery 126 7.5 Conclusion 131 Chapter 8 Injunctions 133 8.1 Sustainable tourism 134 8.2 What about your carbon footprint? 139 8.3 Whose turn is it? 143 8.4 Conclusion 145 Conclusion 147 References 155 Index of Common Nouns 161 Index of Proper Nouns 163
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