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El. knyga: Semiotics of Heritage Tourism

  • Formatas: 168 pages
  • Serija: Tourism and Cultural Change
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Jan-2014
  • Leidėjas: Channel View Publications
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781845414221
  • Formatas: 168 pages
  • Serija: Tourism and Cultural Change
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Jan-2014
  • Leidėjas: Channel View Publications
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781845414221

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This discussion of the semiotics of global heritage tourism sites seeks to dislodge the dominance of 'the visual' form and to more fully explore the complexity involved in the meaning-making and sense-making processes within heritage tourism. Major themes are the use of semiotics as an analytical tool, and tourists' encounters with the everyday life of places. Some specific topics include heritage attractions and visuality, heritage tourism and marketing narratives, remembering and photography, and implications for critical studies in heritage tourism. B&w photos are included. The book is distributed in the US by UTP Distribution. Annotation ©2014 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

This book presents a new way of understanding heritage tourism that focuses on what people feel and not just what they see. Traditionally, semiotics points to the study of signs and symbols, and how we use them to make sense of the world. Here semiotics is extended into our other senses as part of what it means to experience heritage as tourists.

Recenzijos

It is an ambitious, seemingly impossible, task the authors set themselves. Within the narrow space of mere 123 pages the authors review classic perspectives on visuality and representation, discuss them against recent critical positions, and develops their own position that leaves room for embodiment, affect, and performance as a way into exploring the processes and spaces between performance and representation. They also propose a research agenda for heritage/tourism research. All in all, the authors meet the challenges brilliantly. The ambitions of the book combined with the clear and fast-paced style of argumentation and writing provides the reader with a book that easily can be used in graduate/postgraduate courses as well as short welcome reviews of the state-of-the-art of semiotic approaches to heritage, leisure, tourism with a focus on performance, affect and embodiment. -- Maximiliano E. Korstanje, University of Palermo, Argentina * Annals of Tourism Research 50 (2015) 173181 * Semiotics is most usually conceptualized as a theoretical abstraction about an indivisible signifier/signified integer. Waterton and Watson go much further by considering the semiotics of heritage tourism as a sense-making process that is embodied, performed, felt and emotionally charged. In so doing, they begin to shift the ocular-centrism and the logo-centrism of heritage tourism theoretically and as a practice. This is a considerable achievement and demands our attention. * Russell Staiff, University of Western Sydney, Australia * This rare and wonderfully accessible book represents one of the finest pieces of theoretical scholarship in the heritage field. Waterton and Watson advance a theory of semiotics that goes beyond the visual to embody emergent fields of research in the realms of the representational and non-representational. The book represents a key text in heritage studies and is an exemplary landmark in heritage scholarship. * Divya Tolia-Kelly, Durham University, UK * Waterton and Watson skilfully integrate several emergent dialogues in critical heritage studies and tourism studies centred on theories of affect, the senses, memory, and meaning-making. The authors make a most extraordinary contribution to evolving conceptualizations of tourists as sensing, performing, subjectively situated agents engaged in inter-subjective, embodied encounters with the institutionalized semiotics of authorized and commodified heritage discourses, not passive consumers of such. * Joy Sather-Wagstaff, North Dakota State University, USA * The timely and provocative contribution made by Waterton and Watson to the general re-theorisation of heritage and tourism will doubtless find this concise volume a place on most reading lists and bibliographies across the discipline. * Colin Sterling, UCL, in Papers from the Institute of Archaeology 24(1):8 *

Daugiau informacijos

The book should become a must-read for everyone: those who are learning tourism, those who are managing tourism and those who are 'being' tourism. The messages of encoding and, more so, decoding are made evident through the authors' presentations of the heritage interpretations they encounter within the book. -- Alan Clarke, University of Pannonia, Veszprem, Hungary Journal of Heritage Tourism, 2015
Acknowledgements vii
1 An Introduction
1(10)
Expanding the Semiotic
3(5)
The Structure
8(3)
2 Advancing Theory
11(21)
The Semiotic Landscape
11(2)
Signs of the Times: An Historical Overview
13(18)
Conclusion
31(1)
3 Signing the Past
32(21)
Cultural Context and Cultural Process
33(4)
The Genealogies of Heritage Tourism
37(8)
Seeing is Believing: Heritage Attractions and Visuality
45(5)
Conclusion
50(3)
4 Marketing the Past
53(22)
Discourse and the Marketing Narrative
54(3)
Semiotics and the Heritage `Product'
57(3)
Heritage Tourism and Marketing Narratives
60(3)
The Organization of Marketing Narratives
63(5)
Being There
68(5)
Conclusion
73(2)
5 Remembering
75(23)
A New Theory of Signification
75(2)
Embodied Remembering
77(8)
Remembering and Photography
85(11)
Conclusion
96(2)
6 Living with the Past
98(19)
Semiotics in Place: Everyday Objects and Experiences
99(4)
The Feeling of Temporal Depth
103(2)
De-Differentiating Here and There
105(2)
Intensity and Indifference in Heritage Tourism
107(8)
Conclusion
115(2)
7 Conclusions
117(7)
A New Semiotics of Heritage Tourism
118(2)
The Implications for Critical Studies in Heritage Tourism
120(1)
Some Final Words
121(3)
References 124(13)
Index 137
Emma Waterton is a Senior Lecturer at the Institute for Culture and Society, University of Western Sydney, Australia. Her interests include unpacking the discursive constructions of 'heritage'; community involvement in the management of heritage; the divisions implied between tangible and intangible heritage; and the role played by visual media. Publications include Politics, Policy and the Discourses of Heritage in Britain (2010) and Heritage, Communities and Archaeology (2009, with Laurajane Smith).





Steve Watson is Principal Lecturer in Tourism at York St John University in the UK. His research is focused on the ways in which heritage is constructed and understood in tourism and the way that tourism acts as a vector for various social and cultural meanings. He has published widely in the field of heritage tourism and recent co-edited books include The Cultural Moment in Tourism (2012, with Laurajane Smith and Emma Waterton) and Heritage and Tourism: Place, Encounter, Engagement (2012, with Robyn Bushell and Russell Staiff).