Destinations across the world are beginning to replace or supplement culture-led development strategies with creative development. This book critically analyzes the impact and effectiveness of creative strategies in tourism development and charts the emergence of 'creative tourism'. Why has ‘creati
Tourism and the Spectre of Unlimited Change (Contemporary Geographies of Leisure, Tourism and Mobility)
✍ Scribed by Hazel Tucker
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 263
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This insightful volume forms a sequel to Living with Tourism: Negotiating Identities in a Turkish Village, tracking the tourism development and associated social change in the small town of Göreme, in Turkey’s Cappadocia region, within the last two decades.
Carefully crafted chapters explore the significant changes in the tourism forms, place identity, and social relations in the town. On one level, tourism business and Göreme’s ‘living with tourism’ has matured and thrived: the place has, due largely to its booming hot-air ballooning sector, become an ‘Instagram sensation’; some Göreme families have become very wealthy; and tourism has enabled many local women, as well as men, to ‘craft new selves’. On another level, new inequalities and tensions constantly emerge: some families remain poor; gentrification and hotel developments in the older ‘cave-house’ neighbourhoods have led to the disintegration of community; and many people, including those who are now wealthy, talk often with a sense of nostalgia and regret about what Göreme has become. This book is a groundbreaking longitudinal account, recounting the story of the place and people of Göreme ‘still living with tourism’ after 40 years, showing how broader contemporary tourism trends, such as changes in tourism markets and use of digital technology, and increased security fears, manifest at the local level in tourism destinations.
This book provides new insights for scholars of tourism, anthropology, geography, and social studies, who wish to gain a deeper understanding of this global phenomenon in the contemporary world.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
2 Four Decades of Living with Tourism: From Limited to Unlimited Good
3 Ups and Downs of Hot-Air Balloons Over Two Decades
4 In Search of the Perfect Self(ie): Making Stories, Narrating Self
5 Changing Life in the Mahalle: Neighbourhoods, Gentrification, and Displacement
6 Frontier of Change: From Being Kapali to Crafting New Selves
7 Sticky Memories, Hopes, and Dreams
8 "Enough! (Yeter!)"
Bibliography
Index
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The People’s Republic of China has changed from a country which actively discouraged tourism into one of the major source markets for the international industry; the 35 million Chinese travelling across the border in 2005 are merely the tip of the iceberg. China’s Outbound Tourism is the first bo
<p><span>This book is the first to address the important interrelationship between second homes and climate change, which has become an increasingly relevant issue for many regions around the world. </span></p><p><span>Second homes are often a key source of tourist visitation as well as economic ben
<p><span>This book is the first to address the important interrelationship between second homes and climate change, which has become an increasingly relevant issue for many regions around the world. </span></p><p><span>Second homes are often a key source of tourist visitation as well as economic ben
Drawing upon a variety of important philosophical traditions, this book develops an original perspective on the relations between ethical, economic and aesthetic values in a tourism context. It considers the ethical/political issues arising in many areas of tourism development, including: the p
The world’s polar regions are attracting more interest than ever before. Once regarded as barren, inhospitable places where only explorers go, the north and south polar regions have been transformed into high profile tourism destinations, increasingly visited by cruise ships as well as becoming acce