The past is certainly a distant land and getting there is a difficult and imperfect undertaking (Brown, Hirschman & Maclaran (2006). This paper explores motivations behind how consumers reach that distant land. Over 1,000 respondents of a variety of ethnic groups show very different stories and diaspora timelines, but personal identity and connection with place are always top ranked motivations for interest in ancestors. How might groups, who may suffer from a lack of identity, fit into these findings when \u27personal identity\u27 is the number one reason why consumers engage in genealogy and legacy tourism? Whether a group is well defined (e.g., descended from Norwegian ancestors) or not well defined, results are remarkably similar
If we take an honest look at ourselves and our lineage, we all came from somewhere else. Recent and ...
In this study in progress, the authors examine the phenomenon of identity—particularly in the domain...
This study explored the relationship between second-generation immigrants’ attachment to their ances...
“The past is certainly a distant land and getting there is a difficult and imperfect undertaking” (B...
Ancestral tourism and amateur genealogy are popular phenomena, driving members of diasporas to recon...
Purpose: This paper introduces measures of the motivation of tourists who travel to their ancestral ...
An ancestral legacy is often viewed as the epitome of heritage tourism (McCain, 2003) and can genera...
Ancestry has received limited attention within the tourism literature but is shown to play a crucial...
In recent years, the existence and nature of the heritage tourism market has attracted substantial a...
Heritage tourism is increasingly viewed as an individual and experiential phenomenon as well as bein...
This paper explores 'roots tourism' as a diasporic identity practice. Drawing on accounts of voyages...
Heritage tourism scholars have used notions of performativity and affectto study the ways tourists ...
<p>In this dissertation I explore the "homing desire" (Brah 1996:193) of American diasporas. I argue...
Tourism scholars have yet to consider ancestral tourism as a stepping-stone in genealogicalidentity ...
A persistent trend in the tourism field is the emergence of different types of niche markets. One ni...
If we take an honest look at ourselves and our lineage, we all came from somewhere else. Recent and ...
In this study in progress, the authors examine the phenomenon of identity—particularly in the domain...
This study explored the relationship between second-generation immigrants’ attachment to their ances...
“The past is certainly a distant land and getting there is a difficult and imperfect undertaking” (B...
Ancestral tourism and amateur genealogy are popular phenomena, driving members of diasporas to recon...
Purpose: This paper introduces measures of the motivation of tourists who travel to their ancestral ...
An ancestral legacy is often viewed as the epitome of heritage tourism (McCain, 2003) and can genera...
Ancestry has received limited attention within the tourism literature but is shown to play a crucial...
In recent years, the existence and nature of the heritage tourism market has attracted substantial a...
Heritage tourism is increasingly viewed as an individual and experiential phenomenon as well as bein...
This paper explores 'roots tourism' as a diasporic identity practice. Drawing on accounts of voyages...
Heritage tourism scholars have used notions of performativity and affectto study the ways tourists ...
<p>In this dissertation I explore the "homing desire" (Brah 1996:193) of American diasporas. I argue...
Tourism scholars have yet to consider ancestral tourism as a stepping-stone in genealogicalidentity ...
A persistent trend in the tourism field is the emergence of different types of niche markets. One ni...
If we take an honest look at ourselves and our lineage, we all came from somewhere else. Recent and ...
In this study in progress, the authors examine the phenomenon of identity—particularly in the domain...
This study explored the relationship between second-generation immigrants’ attachment to their ances...