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This research-based monograph presents an introduction to the
concept of film-induced tourism, building on the work of the
seminal first edition. Many new case studies exploring the
relationship between film and TV and tourism have been added and
existing cases have been updated. The book incorporates studies on
film studio theme parks, the impact of film-induced tourism on
communities and the effect of film on tourists' behaviour. It
introduces new content including film-induced tourism in
non-Western cultures, movie tours and contents tourism. The book is
an essential resource for postgraduate students and researchers in
the fields of tourism, film and media studies.
The Tourist Experience is complex, intrinsically personal, and
highly emotional. Consequently, it is not easy to understand what
it is that drives us to continue to travel, and to return to places
visited. It is important for all sides of the travel, tourism, and
hospitality industries to understand what tourists are searching
for as well as what they experience, with emotions playing a
central role. The research outlined in Unravelling Travelling:
Uncovering Tourist Emotions through Autoethnography delves into the
deep, personal, and very subjective emotions experienced while
travelling to foreign places. Taking an autoethnographic approach,
this evocative, reflexive, critical and analytical study uncovers a
range of personal emotional drivers that resonate across
disciplinary boundaries. Examining the development of
autoethnography in the social sciences, where the researchers often
expose deeply personal experiences that cannot be directly
interpreted from an outsider's perspective, Unravelling Travelling
offers an in-depth commentary on the role of autoethnography in the
tourism field. This personal account from author Sue Beeton goes
beyond simple memoir, exposing the practices of researcher, as well
as the methodology employed. Personal travel narratives and poems
not only uncover emotions that may not be evident through other
research approaches, but also by being highly critical of her own
work, Beeton argues the case for and against autoethnography
itself.
This book elaborates upon, critiques and discusses 21st-century
approaches to scholarship and research in the food, tourism,
hospitality, and events trades and applied professions, using case
examples of innovative practice. The specific field considered in
this book is also placed against the backdrop of the larger
question of how universities and other institutions of higher
learning are evolving and addressing the new relationships between
research, scholarship and teaching.
This book elaborates upon, critiques and discusses 21st-century
approaches to scholarship and research in the food, tourism,
hospitality, and events trades and applied professions, using case
examples of innovative practice. The specific field considered in
this book is also placed against the backdrop of the larger
question of how universities and other institutions of higher
learning are evolving and addressing the new relationships between
research, scholarship and teaching.
This book explores the relationship between tourism and the moving
image, from the early era of silent moving pictures through to
cinema as mass entertainment. It examines how our active and
emotional engagement with moving images provides meaning and
connection to a place that can affect our decision-making when we
travel. It also analyses how our touristic experiences can inform
our film-viewing. A range of genres and themes are studied
including the significance of the western, espionage, road and
gangster movies, along with further study of film studio theme
parks and an introduction to the relationship between gaming and
travel. This book will appeal to tourism scholars as well as film
studies professionals, and is written in an accessible manner for a
general audience.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
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