[[abstract]]This article looks at gender performance and bodily regulation in historic museums in China where cultural commercialization has accompanied tourism. Cultural tourism has become a favourite local strategy of development since China’s economic reforms began in 1978. As in other host countries, historic museums in China are some of the most-visited places for tourists. With an influx of increasing number of tourists, historic museums in China no longer function exclusively as an ideology state apparatus. Most of them are in transition, becoming more market-oriented institutes of representation. The article points out that mostly the female staff of these museums consciously compare themselves with other guides from tourist agencie...
This article seeks to offer a historical perspective to the discussion of the rise of private museum...
Hitchhiking travel has received little interest from tourism researchers despite its association wit...
In this article, I challenge the idea of a “one-way” relationship in which tourists are supposed to ...
This article explores the female space in the painting of Qianlong Southern Inspection Tour, which d...
From a historical perspective, tourism has a masculine origin. When the term, 'tourist' began to eme...
By examining gender scripts and performances in Chinese nostalgic studio wedding photography, this a...
This ethnography examines changing relationships between government and business through the emergen...
Past research has shown that because tourism itself is a product of a gendered society, its processe...
Despite increased social science engagement with the body, its sensuousness and everyday performativ...
China is increasingly viewed as a dominant and essential component in global tourism. However, apart...
Ethnic minority groups (shaoshu minzu) have continued to be silenced in Chinese museums’ expert-led ...
This thesis explores issues of subjectivity and gender around ritual activity in Xianyou county, Fuj...
This paper presents research exploring the narratives Chinese women and men share online regarding g...
This paper offers a comparative ethnographic investigation of two rural migrant workers museums, one...
Since the turn of the millennium, many contemporary Chinese artists have used their own bodies or ac...
This article seeks to offer a historical perspective to the discussion of the rise of private museum...
Hitchhiking travel has received little interest from tourism researchers despite its association wit...
In this article, I challenge the idea of a “one-way” relationship in which tourists are supposed to ...
This article explores the female space in the painting of Qianlong Southern Inspection Tour, which d...
From a historical perspective, tourism has a masculine origin. When the term, 'tourist' began to eme...
By examining gender scripts and performances in Chinese nostalgic studio wedding photography, this a...
This ethnography examines changing relationships between government and business through the emergen...
Past research has shown that because tourism itself is a product of a gendered society, its processe...
Despite increased social science engagement with the body, its sensuousness and everyday performativ...
China is increasingly viewed as a dominant and essential component in global tourism. However, apart...
Ethnic minority groups (shaoshu minzu) have continued to be silenced in Chinese museums’ expert-led ...
This thesis explores issues of subjectivity and gender around ritual activity in Xianyou county, Fuj...
This paper presents research exploring the narratives Chinese women and men share online regarding g...
This paper offers a comparative ethnographic investigation of two rural migrant workers museums, one...
Since the turn of the millennium, many contemporary Chinese artists have used their own bodies or ac...
This article seeks to offer a historical perspective to the discussion of the rise of private museum...
Hitchhiking travel has received little interest from tourism researchers despite its association wit...
In this article, I challenge the idea of a “one-way” relationship in which tourists are supposed to ...