Tourism and visual culture
Burns Peter
Tourism and visual culture (Volume 2: Methods and Cases) - 1st ed., - UK. CABI, 2010. - 240 p., 17.27 x 1.78 x 24.38 cm
The study of tourism as a complex social trend is growing in importance as it receives recognition as a force far more significant than economic, environmental, and social analyses convey. This volume explores tourism as a significant phenomenon in both generating and receiving societies, examining methods and cases that demonstrate, develop, and affirm tourism's essentially visual nature. Tourism-related methodologies such as photographs, souvenirs and advertising material are used to discuss findings.
1: Examining the Messages of Contemporary ""Tourist Art"" in Yucatán, Mexico: Comparing Chichén Itzá and the Puuc Region, Mary Katherine Scott
2: Medialization of Touristic Reality: The Berlin Wall Revisited, Anja Saretzki
3: Vision, translation, rhetoric: constructing heritage in museum exhibitions, Susan L T. Ashley
4: Visual Images of Metaphors in Tourism Advertising, Elmira Djafarova
5: Visual and tourist dimensions of Trentino's Borderscape, Valentina Anzoise and Stefano Malatesta
6: The Campi Flegrei: A Case Study, I. Fusco and G. Lombardi
7: The use of visual products in relation to time-space behaviour of cultural tourists, Christa Barten and Rami Isaac
8: Integrating multiple research methods: A visual sociology approach to Venice, Paolo Parmeggiani
9: Using Volunteer-employed Photography: Seeing St David's Peninsula through the eyes of locals and tourists, Nika Balomenou and Brian Garrod
10: Visual Methodologies and Photographic Practices: Encounters with Hadrian's Wall World Heritage Site, Victoria Bell
11: From 'The Dunghill of England' to 'The Jewel of the Commonwealth': Using the concept of tourism image to explore identity and tourism in 19C and early 20C Tasmania, Marian Walker
12: The construction of destinations-Symbolic meanings for destinations and visitors, Albertine van Diepen and Elke Ennen
13: Destination-promoted and visitor-generated images - do they represent similar stories? Iis P. Tussyadiah
14: Photographs in brochures as the representation of induced image in the marketing of destinations: A case study of Istanbul, Gökçe Özdemer
15: Rematerialising Tourism Research through Visual Ethnography, Nissa Ramsay
16: Images of beauty and family. Contemporary imagery at Aquafan, Laura Gemini and Giovanni Boccia Artieri
17: ""You Can Do Anything in Goa, India"" A Visual Ethnography of Tourism as Neo-colonialism, Ranjan Bandyopadhyay
Peter Burns, Institute for Tourism Research (INTOUR), UK, Jo-Anne Lester, University of Brighton, Lyn Bibbings, Formerly Oxford Brookes University, UK
9781845936112
Tourisam
306.4819 / BUR
Tourism and visual culture (Volume 2: Methods and Cases) - 1st ed., - UK. CABI, 2010. - 240 p., 17.27 x 1.78 x 24.38 cm
The study of tourism as a complex social trend is growing in importance as it receives recognition as a force far more significant than economic, environmental, and social analyses convey. This volume explores tourism as a significant phenomenon in both generating and receiving societies, examining methods and cases that demonstrate, develop, and affirm tourism's essentially visual nature. Tourism-related methodologies such as photographs, souvenirs and advertising material are used to discuss findings.
1: Examining the Messages of Contemporary ""Tourist Art"" in Yucatán, Mexico: Comparing Chichén Itzá and the Puuc Region, Mary Katherine Scott
2: Medialization of Touristic Reality: The Berlin Wall Revisited, Anja Saretzki
3: Vision, translation, rhetoric: constructing heritage in museum exhibitions, Susan L T. Ashley
4: Visual Images of Metaphors in Tourism Advertising, Elmira Djafarova
5: Visual and tourist dimensions of Trentino's Borderscape, Valentina Anzoise and Stefano Malatesta
6: The Campi Flegrei: A Case Study, I. Fusco and G. Lombardi
7: The use of visual products in relation to time-space behaviour of cultural tourists, Christa Barten and Rami Isaac
8: Integrating multiple research methods: A visual sociology approach to Venice, Paolo Parmeggiani
9: Using Volunteer-employed Photography: Seeing St David's Peninsula through the eyes of locals and tourists, Nika Balomenou and Brian Garrod
10: Visual Methodologies and Photographic Practices: Encounters with Hadrian's Wall World Heritage Site, Victoria Bell
11: From 'The Dunghill of England' to 'The Jewel of the Commonwealth': Using the concept of tourism image to explore identity and tourism in 19C and early 20C Tasmania, Marian Walker
12: The construction of destinations-Symbolic meanings for destinations and visitors, Albertine van Diepen and Elke Ennen
13: Destination-promoted and visitor-generated images - do they represent similar stories? Iis P. Tussyadiah
14: Photographs in brochures as the representation of induced image in the marketing of destinations: A case study of Istanbul, Gökçe Özdemer
15: Rematerialising Tourism Research through Visual Ethnography, Nissa Ramsay
16: Images of beauty and family. Contemporary imagery at Aquafan, Laura Gemini and Giovanni Boccia Artieri
17: ""You Can Do Anything in Goa, India"" A Visual Ethnography of Tourism as Neo-colonialism, Ranjan Bandyopadhyay
Peter Burns, Institute for Tourism Research (INTOUR), UK, Jo-Anne Lester, University of Brighton, Lyn Bibbings, Formerly Oxford Brookes University, UK
9781845936112
Tourisam
306.4819 / BUR
