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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Fabian FrenzelPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Zed Books Ltd Dimensions: Width: 13.40cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 21.40cm Weight: 0.380kg ISBN: 9781783604432ISBN 10: 1783604433 Pages: 230 Publication Date: 15 June 2016 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews'Based on years of embedded fieldwork, Frenzel's book cuts through the powerful mythology surrounding the so-called slums, townships, and favelas as tourist attractions to construct a revelatory narrative of the relationship between poverty and tourism, exploitation and political activism.' Bianca Freire-Medeiros, author of Touring Poverty 'The reality of the slum is much fought over in commentary. Frenzel cuts through the confusion to evaluate the valorisation of poverty in tourism. With examples ranging across India, Brazil, Europe and South Africa, Frenzel offers an analysis, both comparative and detailed, that is a theoretically-informed advance on current scholarship.' John Hutnyk, author of The Rumour of Calcutta 'Frenzel has written a very inspiring book, that is full of ideas and also deeply political. He opens up many new perspectives on slum tourism, and highlights its local and global dimensions.' Manfred Rolfes, University of Potsdam 'Based on years of embedded fieldwork, Frenzel's book cuts through the powerful mythology surrounding the so-called slums, townships, and favelas as tourist attractions to construct a revelatory narrative of the relationship between poverty and tourism, exploitation and political activism.' Bianca Freire-Medeiros, author of Touring Poverty 'The reality of the slum is much fought over in commentary. Frenzel cuts through the confusion to evaluate the valorisation of poverty in tourism. With examples ranging across India, Brazil, Europe and South Africa, Frenzel offers an analysis, both comparative and detailed, that is a theoretically-informed advance on current scholarship.' John Hutnyk, author of The Rumour of Calcutta 'Frenzel has written a very inspiring book, that is full of ideas and also deeply political. He opens up many new perspectives on slum tourism, and highlights its local and global dimensions.' Manfred Rolfes, University of Potsdam 'Based on years of embedded fieldwork, Frenzel's book cuts through the powerful mythology surrounding the so-called slums, townships, and favelas as tourist attractions to construct a revelatory narrative of the relationship between poverty and tourism, exploitation and political activism.' Bianca Freire-Medeiros, author of Touring Poverty 'The reality of the slum is much fought over in commentary. Frenzel cuts through the confusion to evaluate the valorisation of poverty in tourism. With examples ranging across India, Brazil, Europe and South Africa, Frenzel offers an analysis, both comparative and detailed, that is a theoretically-informed advance on current scholarship.' John Hutnyk, author of The Rumour of Calcutta 'Based on years of embedded fieldwork, Frenzel's book cuts through the powerful mythology surrounding the so-called slums, townships, and favelas as tourist attractions to construct a revelatory narrative of the relationship between poverty and tourism, exploitation and political activism.' Bianca Freire-Medeiros, author of Touring Poverty 'The reality of the slum is much fought over in commentary. Frenzel cuts through the confusion to evaluate the valorisation of poverty in tourism. With examples ranging across India, Brazil, Europe and South Africa, Frenzel offers an analysis, both comparative and detailed, that is a theoretically-informed advance on current scholarship.' John Hutnyk, author of The Rumour of Calcutta 'The definitive book on the topic.' Forbes 'A provoking read, exceptional in its efforts to understand slum tourism as a global industry and a symbolic practice of valorisation.' Africa at LSE 'A well-argued case for building political projects out of what we have in common, rather than being immobilised by cultural difference.' VICE 'Highly recommended. A stirring text on an emerging yet controversial niche form of tourism.' Choice 'Slumming It resists reductive treatment of slum tourism as universally positive or negative. What it does raise the possibility of is how tourism may contribute to a politics of solidarity .' Environment and Urbanization 'Successfully weaves together economics, human geography and cultural studies in order to create a well-balanced analysis.' Impaktr 'Based on years of embedded fieldwork, Frenzel's book cuts through the powerful mythology surrounding the so-called slums, townships, and favelas as tourist attractions to construct a revelatory narrative of the relationship between poverty and tourism, exploitation and political activism.' Bianca Freire-Medeiros, author of Touring Poverty 'The reality of the slum is much fought over in commentary. Frenzel cuts through the confusion to evaluate the valorisation of poverty in tourism. With examples ranging across India, Brazil, Europe and South Africa, Frenzel offers an analysis, both comparative and detailed, that is a theoretically-informed advance on current scholarship.' John Hutnyk, author of The Rumour of Calcutta 'This provocative and beautifully written study of slum tourism will transform your assumptions about the politics of slumming it. Drawing on rich ethnographic data, Frenzel carefully considers the activist potential of tourism to enact a relational politics of solidarity and care.' Imogen Tyler, author of Revolting Subjects 'Frenzel has written a very inspiring book, that is full of ideas and also deeply political. He opens up many new perspectives on slum tourism, and highlights its local and global dimensions.' Manfred Rolfes, University of Potsdam 'Rich empirical evidence, expertly interrogated by notions of place valorisation, make this a fascinating piece of cutting-edge research on a fast emerging field of study. It makes a significant contribution to the available literature and is key reading for professionals and scholars alike.' Eveline Durr, LMU Munich 'A bold and carefully crafted analysis of slums and slum tourism. Theoretically grounded in the concepts of tourist valorization and local value regimes, it offers a nuanced and state of the art understanding of the nexus of tourism, slums and poverty.' Christian M. Rogerson, University of Johannesburg Author InformationFabian Frenzel is lecturer in organization studies at the University of Leicester and senior research fellow with the University of Johannesburg. From 2012 to 2014 he was a Marie Sklodowska-Curie fellow at the University of Potsdam, Germany. His research interests concern the intersections of mobility, politics and organization studies. His previous books include Protest Camps (co-authored with Anna Feigenbaum and Patrick McCurdy, Zed Books, 2013). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |