This article examines images of Bushmen in Namibian cultural tourism from two angles: that of the tourists and that of the community-based tourism provider. By looking at the tourist activities offered at Treesleeper Camp, it will be shown that in host-guest encounters, tourists images of (Hai//om) Bushmen interrelate with the images presented by the local hosts, and that tourists perceptions and the images sought to be transmitted by the community-based local tourism provider are (partly) different. Tourists quest for authentic Bushmen cultures often reflects the expectation of a pristine and exotic other-an image that is derived from colonial views, anthropology, media and the tourism industry. But there are also tourists who are looking ...
The Namibian government promotes community-based tourism (CBT) as market-based development. At Trees...
<p>The question of who controls Indigenous tourism is of wide and growing relevance in post-colonial...
So-called indigenous 1 people, such as the Bushmen of Namibia, are often seen as ‘traditional conser...
This article examines images of Bushmen in Namibian cultural tourism from two angles: that of the to...
This article examines images of Bushmen in Namibian cultural tourism from two angles: that of the to...
This article focuses on a project called Treesleeper Camp as a case study about Bushmen, wildlife pa...
Many scholars have explained that the primordial image of Bushmen, in whichthey are represented as t...
Dwelling in Tourism highlights how marginalised Bushmen people are in the middle of a struggle bet...
Namibian Bushmen, such as the Hai//om and the Ju/’hoansi, are increasingly involved in the growing, ...
Indigenous tourism is a debated topic as the lifestyle and culture of indigenous groups are increasi...
Since 1990s alternative modes of tourism havebecome important and visible in Western tourismmarkets,...
Abstract My study is focused on the Finnish missionary work among Bushmen in eastern Ovambo and Kav...
Despite it being widely recognised that the Bushmen of southern Africa have the oldest DNA in the wo...
Item does not contain fulltextIn Australia there is a persistent stereotypical image on which many t...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.The thesis is an ethnographic exploration o...
The Namibian government promotes community-based tourism (CBT) as market-based development. At Trees...
<p>The question of who controls Indigenous tourism is of wide and growing relevance in post-colonial...
So-called indigenous 1 people, such as the Bushmen of Namibia, are often seen as ‘traditional conser...
This article examines images of Bushmen in Namibian cultural tourism from two angles: that of the to...
This article examines images of Bushmen in Namibian cultural tourism from two angles: that of the to...
This article focuses on a project called Treesleeper Camp as a case study about Bushmen, wildlife pa...
Many scholars have explained that the primordial image of Bushmen, in whichthey are represented as t...
Dwelling in Tourism highlights how marginalised Bushmen people are in the middle of a struggle bet...
Namibian Bushmen, such as the Hai//om and the Ju/’hoansi, are increasingly involved in the growing, ...
Indigenous tourism is a debated topic as the lifestyle and culture of indigenous groups are increasi...
Since 1990s alternative modes of tourism havebecome important and visible in Western tourismmarkets,...
Abstract My study is focused on the Finnish missionary work among Bushmen in eastern Ovambo and Kav...
Despite it being widely recognised that the Bushmen of southern Africa have the oldest DNA in the wo...
Item does not contain fulltextIn Australia there is a persistent stereotypical image on which many t...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.The thesis is an ethnographic exploration o...
The Namibian government promotes community-based tourism (CBT) as market-based development. At Trees...
<p>The question of who controls Indigenous tourism is of wide and growing relevance in post-colonial...
So-called indigenous 1 people, such as the Bushmen of Namibia, are often seen as ‘traditional conser...