More than thirty years ago, Enzenberger complained that a culturally oriented “history of tourism is still to be written” : he then took some first steps towards a tentative “theory of tourism”, rejecting a too-easy anti-tourist attitude, as the combined effect of a surviving myth of the ‘true traveller’(rewritten by modernist and post-war intellectuals), and of that often simplistic critique (usually of Marxist matrix) which dismissed tourism as a ‘suspicious phenomenon’, linked to pleasure and leisure rather than to labour and social commitment. Enzensberger’s defense of the tourist appealed to the idea of a persistent ‘innocence’ and a subversive vitality, which were in themselves an interesting perspective. Enzensberger’s approach marks...