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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Denis Linehan , Ian D. Clark , Philip F. XiePublisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9781789908183ISBN 10: 1789908183 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 06 October 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction 1 Denis Linehan, Ian D. Clark and Philip F. Xie PART I 2 Glimpses of the East via Japan: representing colonial Korea and French Indochina in the interwar years 13 H. Hazel Hahn 3 Towards recovered territory: the Chinese tourist rush to Taiwan, 1946–49 28 António Barrento 4 Aboriginal interactions and associations with the hospitality industry in colonial Victoria, 1835–70 44 Ian D. Clark 5 ‘They surprised them with national airs’: Aboriginal brass bands, tourism and sentimental colonialism 58 Toby Martin 6 ‘Neither wholly British nor wholly American but something in-between’: US tourism and layered colonialisms in the British West Indies 77 John S. Hogue PART II 7 Beyond the postcard: a translated Hawai’i for tourists 95 Ana Cristina Gomes da Rocha 8 A pagoda at the pearl of the Indian Ocean: producing nostalgic colonialism and heritage tourism in Mozambique 110 Eve Wong 9 The pursuit of Macanese identity: colonization and re-colonization through tourism 128 Ivy Lai-Chu Lou and Philip F. Xie 10 Displacement, memories and struggle: the case of Mapari Ranch in Zimbabwe 147 Svongwa Nemadire and Maarten Loopmans 11 Coloniality, tourism and city-branding as an apparatus of forgetting in Dunedin, Aotearoa New Zealand 163 Holly Randell-Moon 12 Afterword 180 Philip F. Xie and Ian D. Clark IndexReviews'This innovative collection embraces the spatial turn in the humanities and adopts a topographical approach to explore the powerful associations between cultures and societies, colonialism and space. The capacity of the various humanities is particularly welcome for decoding the power of colonial and post-colonial representations through the medium of tourism. The editors deserve commendation for assembling a highly stimulating volume that brings fresh theoretical approaches to the study of tourism and connects diverse settings with a genuinely global perspective.' -- Brian King, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong 'Vividly interrogating colonial tourism's hierarchies, this book explores the centuries of Eurocentric global expansion that shape these tourism attractions along with the resistance and critique they provoke. It also provides a fresh refocus on nationalism, identities and power through the comparison to Japanese and Chinese imperialist tourism. Intersecting commonalties include subaltern exploitation by dominant racial/ethnic groups, imaginaries of nostalgic compliance, and erasure or valorization of colonization's violence which are brought together in a rich sourcebook of case studies that expand our knowledge of coloniality in tourism.' -- Margaret Swain, University of California, Davis, US 'This innovative collection embraces the spatial turn in the humanities and adopts a topographical approach to explore the powerful associations between cultures and societies, colonialism and space. The capacity of the various humanities is particularly welcome for decoding the power of colonial and post-colonial representations through the medium of tourism. The editors deserve commendation for assembling a highly stimulating volume that brings fresh theoretical approaches to the study of tourism and connects diverse settings with a genuinely global perspective.' -- Brian King, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong 'Vividly interrogating colonial tourism's hierarchies, this book explores the centuries of Eurocentric global expansion that shape these tourism attractions along with the resistance and critique they provoke. It also provides a fresh refocus on nationalism, identities and power through the comparison to Japanese and Chinese imperialist tourism. Intersecting commonalties include subaltern exploitation by dominant racial/ethnic groups, imaginaries of nostalgic compliance, and erasure or valorization of colonization's violence which are brought together in a rich sourcebook of case studies that expand our knowledge of coloniality in tourism.' --Margaret Swain, University of California, Davis, US'This innovative collection embraces the ''spatial turn' in the humanities and adopts a topographical approach to explore the powerful associations between cultures and societies, colonialism and space. The capacity of the various humanities is particularly welcome for decoding the power of colonial and post-colonial representations through the medium of tourism. The editors deserve commendation for assembling a highly stimulating volume that brings fresh theoretical approaches to the study of tourism and connects diverse settings with a genuinely global perspective.' --Brian King, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong 'A fascinating scholarly work that allows readers to re-examine colonialism in all its guises. Themes of dispossession, the annihilation of indigenous culture and re-colonisation are explored. The numerous insights in this book highlight the remarkable global reach of colonisation showing how as one colonial power declined, another emerged. The remnants of colonialism now create a level of familiarity for travellers to connect with a sanitised past.' --Barry O'Mahony, Abu Dhabi University, United Arab Emirates and Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Author InformationEdited by Denis Linehan, University College Cork, Ireland, Ian D. Clark, Federation University Australia, Australia and Philip F. Xie, Professor of Tourism, Hospitality and Event Management, Bowling Green State University, US Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |