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            Tourism Geopolitics

            Assemblages of Infrastructure, Affect, and Imagination

            Thumbnail
            Contributor(s)
            Mostafanezhad, Mary (editor)
            Azcárate, Matilde Córdoba (editor)
            Norum, Roger (editor)
            Collection
            Knowledge Unlatched (KU)
            Language
            English
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            Abstract
            By the start of the century, nearly one billion international travelers were circulating the globe annually, placing tourism among the worlds’ most ubiquitous geopolitical encounters. While the COVID-19 pandemic brought the industry to a sudden halt, its geopolitical significance remained. With striking clarity, tourism desires and reinvented mobilities revealed the impermanence of Old World orders as new global alliances were forged. While scholars have critically examined tourism in the contexts of development, cultural change, and environmental crisis, much less attention has been paid to the geopolitical drivers and consequences of the world’s largest industry. This collection homes in on tourism and its geopolitical entanglements by examining its contemporary affects, imaginaries, and infrastructures. It develops the concept of tourism geopolitics to reveal the growing centrality of tourism in geopolitical life, as well as the geopolitical nature of the tourism encounter. In Tourism Geopolitics, contributors show enacted processes such as labor migration, conservation, securitization, nation building, territorial disputes, ethnic cleansing, heritage revitalization, and global health crisis management, among others. These contended societal processes are deployed through tourism development initiatives that mobilize deeply uneven symbolic and material landscapes. The chapters reveal how a range of experiences are implicated in this process: museum visits, walking tours, architectonical evocations of the past, road construction, militarized island imaginations, gendered cultural texts, and official silences. Collectively, the chapters offer ethnographically rich illustrations from around the world that demonstrate the critical nature of tourism in formal geopolitical practices, as well as the geopolitical nature of everyday tourism encounters. This volume is a vital read for critical geographers, anthropologists, and political scientists, as well as scholars of tourism and cultural studies. Contributors: Sarah Becklake, M. Bianet Castellanos, Matilde Córdoba Azcárate, Jason Dittmer, Klaus Dodds, Jamie Gillen, Simon Halink, Jordan Hallbauer, James Igoe, Debbie Lisle, Mary Mostafanezhad, Dieter K. Müller, Roger Norum, Alessandro Rippa, Ian Rowen, Robert Saunders, Juan Francisco Salazar, Tani Sebro, Mimi Sheller, Henry Szadziewski, Vernadette Vicuña González, Emma Waterton
            URI
            https://doab-dev.siscern.org/handle/20.500.12854/174546
            Keywords
            Social Science; Political Science; Geopolitics; Social Science; Anthropology; Cultural & Social; thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JB Society and culture: general; thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JP Politics and government::JPS International relations::JPSL Geopolitics; thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JH Sociology and anthropology::JHM Anthropology::JHMC Social and cultural anthropology
            ISBN
            9780816543038
            Publisher
            University of Arizona Press
            Publication date and place
            2021
            Grantor
            • Knowledge Unlatched
            Imprint
            University of Arizona Press
            Classification
            Society & culture: general
            Geopolitics
            Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography
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            • logo Investir l'avenirInvestir l'avenir
            • logo MESRIMESRI
            • logo EUEuropean Union
              This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871069.

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