Today’s world, characterized by networked agencies, global flows, cultural hybridity, and movements of people within and across borders, contextualizes tourism in many ways. Paying close attention to the multiple translations and circulations of the concept of “tourism” across the globe, this symposium endeavors to elaborate both the spatial and temporal dimensions of the conceptual history of tourism. With this theme in mind, the symposium will deal with the following questions: How has the western concept of tourism (primarily Anglophone and French) traveled to non-Western contexts in Asia (including the Middle East), Africa, or South America, thereby imposing a discursive hegemony of a conceptual lexicon? Which native/local concepts of h...
Tales of Tourism - Global Changes and tourism discourse by Karina Smed presents us with what has bee...
From Here to Diversity: Globalization and Intercultural Dialogues sees interculturalism as movement,...
This article addresses critiques of Eurocentrism in tourism studies, which have called for a “paradi...
Abstract Today’s world, characterized by networked agencies, global flows, cultural hybridity, an...
Tourism is the largest sector of the global economy and growing rapidly. Tourism travel is now the p...
This paper proposes a conceptual framework to understand how tourism evolves. By using the work of h...
Tales of Tourism - Global Changes and tourism discourse by Karina Smedpresents us with wha...
International audienceThis article explores the notion of " cultural tourism ", and the way it has b...
The present issue of Textus focuses on tourism discourse from the many broad perspectives of linguis...
The language of tourism has been defined as a specialised kind of discourse, and this is especially ...
Introduction Cultural geography, with its traditions of studying regional cultures, has tended to p...
The main terms, such Culture, Cultural Landscape, Heritage or Cultural Tourism are not neutral scien...
Current discussions of globalization that have burst into academic andpublic discourse in the last f...
Increasing numbers of people from the emerging world regions, Asia, Latin America, Africa and the Mi...
The making and consuming of tourism takes place within a complex social milieu, with competing actor...
Tales of Tourism - Global Changes and tourism discourse by Karina Smed presents us with what has bee...
From Here to Diversity: Globalization and Intercultural Dialogues sees interculturalism as movement,...
This article addresses critiques of Eurocentrism in tourism studies, which have called for a “paradi...
Abstract Today’s world, characterized by networked agencies, global flows, cultural hybridity, an...
Tourism is the largest sector of the global economy and growing rapidly. Tourism travel is now the p...
This paper proposes a conceptual framework to understand how tourism evolves. By using the work of h...
Tales of Tourism - Global Changes and tourism discourse by Karina Smedpresents us with wha...
International audienceThis article explores the notion of " cultural tourism ", and the way it has b...
The present issue of Textus focuses on tourism discourse from the many broad perspectives of linguis...
The language of tourism has been defined as a specialised kind of discourse, and this is especially ...
Introduction Cultural geography, with its traditions of studying regional cultures, has tended to p...
The main terms, such Culture, Cultural Landscape, Heritage or Cultural Tourism are not neutral scien...
Current discussions of globalization that have burst into academic andpublic discourse in the last f...
Increasing numbers of people from the emerging world regions, Asia, Latin America, Africa and the Mi...
The making and consuming of tourism takes place within a complex social milieu, with competing actor...
Tales of Tourism - Global Changes and tourism discourse by Karina Smed presents us with what has bee...
From Here to Diversity: Globalization and Intercultural Dialogues sees interculturalism as movement,...
This article addresses critiques of Eurocentrism in tourism studies, which have called for a “paradi...