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Festivals, Tourism and Social Change: Remaking Worlds
Contributor(s): Picard, David (Editor), Robinson, Mike (Editor)
ISBN: 1845410483     ISBN-13: 9781845410483
Publisher: Channel View Publications
OUR PRICE:   $123.45  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: October 2006
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Holidays (non Religious)
- Business & Economics | Industries - Hospitality, Travel & Tourism
- Social Science | Anthropology - General
Dewey: 394.26
LCCN: 2006011057
Series: Tourism and Cultural Change
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 5.8" W x 8.4" (1.15 lbs) 304 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
This book explores the links between tourism and festivals and the various ways in which each mobilises the other to make social realities meaningful. Drawing upon a series of international cases, festivals are examined as ways of responding to various forms of crisis - social, political, economic - and as a way of re-making and re-animating spaces and social life. Importantly, this book locates festivals in the constantly changing, socio-economic and political contexts that they always operate in and respond to - contexts that are both historical and modern at the same time. Tourism is bound closely together with such contexts; feeding and challenging festivals with audiences that are increasingly transient and transnational. Tourism interrogates notions of ritual and tradition, shapes new spaces and creates, and renews, relationships between participants and observers. No longer can we dismiss tourists simply as value neutral and crass consumers of spectacle, nor tourism as some inevitable commercial force. Tourism is increasingly complicit in the festival processes of re-invention, and in forming new patterns of social existence.

Contributor Bio(s): Picard, David: - David Picard is Senior Researcher at the Centre for Research in Anthropology (CRIA), Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities (FCSH) at Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal. His research interests include the anthropology of tourism and hospitality as well as land and resource tenure. Recent publications include Tourism, Magic and Modernity (2011).