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The%20Anthropology%20of%20Tourism

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Title: The%20Anthropology%20of%20Tourism


1
The Anthropology of Tourism
  • Tourism and Globalization

2
Defined
  • Tourism Difficult to define because business
    travelers and convention goers can combine
    conferences with tourist-type activities
  • A tourist is a temporarily leisured person who
    voluntarily visits a place away from home for the
    purpose of experiencing a change
  • One of the most important aspects of tourism
    is..IT IS NOT WORK!

3
History
  • The establishment of tourism as a legitimate
    topic for anthropological study is a relatively
    recent development. 
  • Theron Nuñezs Tourism, Tradition, and
    Acculturation Weekendismo in a Mexican Village
    (1963) is often credited as the earliest
    tourism-related article in American
    anthropological literature. 

4
  • Rich residents of Guadalajara, Mexico, who built
    villas in a poverty stricken community on
    environmentally pristine Lake Chapala.
  • Strange thing here, the locals envisioned the
    tourists as foreigners, assuming they were
    American/Canadian/etc
  • He suggested that tourism may be studied within
    the general framework of acculturation. Tourists
    act as donors of culture to regional
    recipients (ie enclaves of tourist culture,
    the transition of culture models from tourist to
    local)
  • Not a one way street though

5
History
  • Hosts and Guests (1977) a seminal anthology which
    collected work from numerous scholars
  • The hosts must adjust to the needs and demands of
    the more dominating guests
  • It proved extremely influential in the
    development of an anthropological system of
    tourism studies
  • Since the publication of Hosts and Guests there
    has been an explosion of interest in tourism
    within the anthropological community

6
Theory and Themes
  • The anthropological literature on tourism has
    been dominated by ethnographic descriptions of
    niche variants of travel
  • Studies of tourisms effect on local communities
  • Few scholars have focused on developing
    comprehensive theoretical models 

7
Theory and Themes
  • The most influential approaches in current
    anthropological thinking are H.H Graburns
    construction of tourism as a personal
    transformative experience and Dennison Nashs
    view of tourism as a form of modern imperialism.

8
  • Graburn (1983) chose to analyze tourism as a
    symbolic superstructure (ie. Interactions between
    people).
  • Substructure cultural base (normative culture)
  • Infrastructure social organization (law)
  • Superstructure mores and norms of society
    (ideology/the human experience)
  • Nash (1996) has elected to focus his attentions
    on tourisms political and economic aspects

9
Theory and Themes
  • Dean MacCannells research on identity
    construction and staged authenticity (1973,
    1976) is perhaps more valid to our study of
    globalization than any otherhe was a
    SOCIOLOGIST!
  • How we construct the show of tourism
  • How local cultures define themselves for their
    guests

10
  • Staged Authenticity making a modern
    interpretation seem authentic
  • Bad examples include period towns like Old Town
    Sacramento which provide only a veneer of
    authenticity.
  • Good examples can get quiet elaborate like
    Lincoln's New Salem outside of Springfield, Ill

11
Staged Authenticity
  • Does tourism require 'pseudo events' that are
    presented to satisfy tourists' needs for new
    (simulated) experiences ?
  • Does tourism product depends on the staging or
    re-creation of ethnic or cultural traditions?
  • Can high perception of authenticity can be
    achieved even when the event is staged in a place
    far away from the original source of the cultural
    tradition (ie traveling shows)?

12
Staged Authenticity
  • An attempt is made to copy the original then the
    copy is modified to meet the needs of the modern
    community.
  • Tourism, which emerges as a part of this quest,
    is based upon the belief that authentic
    experience resides outside the boundary of
    everyday life in contemporary society (MaCannell
    1976).

13
  • Fine and Speer (1997) an authentic experience
    involves participation in a collective ritual,
    where strangers get together in a cultural
    production to share a feeling of closeness or
    solidarity not only with each other, but also
    with the locals.
  • Sometimes this is positive, sometimes negative

14
  • Tourees (hosts) put their culture (including
    themselves) on sale in order to create an
    appealing package.
  • MacCannell argues to the degree that this
    packaging alters the nature of the product, the
    authenticity sought by the visitor becomes
    staged authenticity provided by the touree (
    MacCannell 1979 596)

15
History of Tourism
  • The elite have always traveled to distant parts
    of the world to see great buildings and works of
    art, to learn new languages, to experience new
    cultures, and to taste different cuisines
  • Historically, we can trace such activities back
    to Rome, but without a doubt earlier
    civilizations participated in leisure travel

16
History of Tourism
  • European tourism may have originated with the
    medieval pilgrimage
  • Primarily for religious reasons
  • The pilgrims in the Canterbury Tales saw the
    experience as a holiday
  • The term itself being derived from the 'holy day'
    and its associated leisure activities

17
History of Tourism
  • By the 17th century. elite often undertook a
    Grand Tour of European countries
  • The sons of the nobility and gentry were sent
    upon an extended tour of Europe as an educational
    experience
  • Thus the history of touring

18
History of Tourism
  • Leisure travel, as we think of it today, is
    associated with industrialization
  • Initially, this applied only to the owners of
    production, the economic oligarchy, the factory
    owners, and the traders
  • As the middle class expanded and economic growth
    spread through the society, the working class
    began to also take advantage of leisure time

19
  • An argument could be made that the rise of
    tourism and world travel had as much of an impact
    on the development of a globalized world as
    colonization.
  • Colonization hegemony by physical force
  • Tourism hegemony by economic force

20
Tourism Types
  • Ethnic Tourism
  • Cultural Tourism
  • Historical Tourism
  • Environmental Tourism
  • Recreational Tourism

21
Examples of special interest tourism
  • Business Tourism
  • Convention Tourism
  • Culinary / Gastronomic Tourism
  • Cultural Heritage / Ethnic Tourism
  • Dark Tourism
  • Environmental / Eco-Tourism
  • Farm Tourism
  • Genealogy Tourism
  • Health / Spa Tourism
  • Religious Pilgrimage Tourism
  • Sex Tourism
  • Space Tourism
  • Sports Tourism
  • Volunteer / Service-Based Tourism

22
Our Tourism Exersize
  • Get into groups of five or so
  • Consider
  • Economic exchanges you experienced as a tourist
    or a local
  • Impacts of tourism on economic systems from both
    perspective
  • Larger relationships of dependency between
    tourists and local
  • How local culture is being sold
  • What that sale might mean

23
  • I. What is your favorite tourist spot? Why?
    What do you do there? What do you look for? Are
    you alone? What do you feel when you go there?
    Who are your favorite companions? How could it
    be better? What would make it worse?
  • II. Think about Monterey or Santa Cruz? What
    makes it a popular tourist spot? What do people
    do there? What kind of "reputation" does it
    have? How could it be improved? What would make
    it worse?
  • III. Think about San Francisco? What makes it a
    popular tourist spot? What do people do there?
    What kind of "reputation" does it have? How
    could it be improved? What would make it worse?
  • IV. How could Silicon Valley be made into a
    tourist spot? What is here that could be
    nurtured? Be specific. What else is needed to
    improve it's marketability?
  • V. What do you want from your tourism? How does
    this reflect your values? How do places
    acquire/change their characters and reputations?

24
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