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I Am Man (Hardcover)
Ana Maria Munar
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R588
R499
Discovery Miles 4 990
Save R89 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book examines the relationship between gender and
sustainability in tourism. Whilst an extensive body of work exists
in the areas of gender and sustainability, these two fields of
knowledge are seldom combined to examine tourism phenomena. When we
look at the evolution of tourism, we see that sustainability has
become an essential element in educational programmes, policy
making and strategic considerations for organisations and
destinations. Whilst the beginnings of tourism sustainability were
challenging, presently, its relevance is seldom questioned.
However, this situation is not the case with gender research.
Although gender theorising and research have existed for over a
century, and a rich legacy of knowledge exists on this topic,
meaningful and respectful engagement with this line of scholarship
is thus far peripheral in tourism studies. The aim of this book is
to reflect on and rethink the intersection of gender and tourism
sustainability through the lens of gender theory and feminist
epistemology to stay with the trouble and devise pathways for
sustainability gender knowledge. This book will be of great
interest to students, researchers, and academics in tourism, gender
and sustainability, as well as tourism management. The chapters in
this book were originally published as a special issue of the
Journal of Sustainable Tourism.
The theme of this book is the phenomenon of tourism and knowledge
construction in tourism. Adopting a broad understanding of the
paradigmatic field of tourism as the evolution and relationship
between established and emergent schools of thought, this book
explores the dynamics between tourism knowledge and the phenomenal
world of tourism. It addresses contemporary epistemological debates
and examines what constitutes tourism knowledge and how tourism
knowledge is acquired. Issues examined in the chapters of this
volume include: the nature and conceptualization of paradigms; the
historical evolution of tourism knowledge production; embodiment,
positionality and situated knowledges; paradigmatic proposals such
as critical theory, feminism, humanism, cosmopolitanism,
post-political theory and constructivism; a critical exploration of
the power relations, contradictions and fragmentation in tourism
research; ontologies and conceptualization of tourism and the
tourist. This volume invites a critical evaluation and discussion
of the anchorage of tourism as a knowledge domain and of tourism as
science.
Academic studies have predominantly treated destination branding as
a marketing phenomenon that happens to involve tourists as
customers in a marketplace. "Tourism Branding: Communities in
Action", the first volume in a new and exciting book series,
considers a traditional marketing subject from multidisciplinary
perspectives. Refreshingly this book attempts to free branding
research and practice in tourism fields from the shackles of
marketing that are dominated by the conventional approach of
product, price, place, and promotion. Considering tourism branding
as a community affair, this collection is distinguished from other
publications by adopting a global and more multidisciplinary
approach, and brings the subject of tourism branding outside of the
conventional domains of marketing and destination. Special
attention is given to the role and expectations of main tourism
stakeholders, particularly residents, business, and government in
the hosting community. Built on theoretical foundations with both
empirical findings and practical cases, this book brings together
different perspectives and offers an intellectual and open dialogue
among academics and practitioners of the field.
This volume addresses the transformative power of tourism social
media and offers novel theoretical and methodological approaches to
its academic investigation. Acknowledging the collective value
creation mechanisms of new media, the authors explore how
technology nurtures, augments and modifies social or commercial
interactions in tourism. The book emphasizes the role of fantasy
and imagination in fluid tourism experiences and critically
scrutinizes contested concepts pertaining to human interaction in
cyberspace, such as equality, anonymity, transparency,
democratization, and publicity culture. The chapters summon
insights from Media Studies, Actor-Network Theory, Communicative
Action and Symbolic Convergence among others, and offer a palette
of emerging methods suitable for academic enquiries of virtual
worlds. The theoretical grounding, empirical evidences, and
interdisciplinary analysis of the anthology expand the actual
research agenda and shed light on conceptual tensions and
ambiguities in the present literature. As such, Tourism Social
Media: Transformations in Identity, Community and Culture
contributes to increasing research reflexivity in tourism studies
at large.
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I Am Man (Paperback)
Ana Maria Munar
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R451
R379
Discovery Miles 3 790
Save R72 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Tourism and Wellness: Travel for the Good of All? enhances academic
understandings and analyses of tourism as a social and worldmaking
force by situating broad questions of well-being, health, and
equity within the scaffolds of critical tourism studies.
Contributors touch on power and politics, space and place,
reflexivity and relationships, values and affect, and inequality
and equity as viewed through critically informed and social justice
perspectives. This collection of cutting-edge, critical tourism
analyses contextualizes and disrupts how wellness is understood in
tourism.
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