Prelims
ISBN: 978-1-78754-817-6, eISBN: 978-1-78754-816-9
ISSN: 1571-5043
Publication date: 14 September 2018
Citation
(2018), "Prelims", Authenticity & Tourism (Tourism Social Science Series, Vol. 24), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xvi. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1571-504320180000024018
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited
Half Title Page
Tourism Social Science Series
Volume 24
Authenticity & Tourism: Materialities, Perceptions, Experiences
Series Page
Tourism Social Science Series
Series Editor: Jafar Jafari
University of Wisconsin-Stout, USA
Universitat de les Illes Balears, Spain
Email: jafari@uwstout.edu
The books in this Tourism Social Science Series (TSSSeries) are intended to systematically and cumulatively contribute to the formation, embodiment and advancement of knowledge in the field of tourism.
The TSSSeries’ multidisciplinary framework and treatment of tourism includes application of theoretical, methodological, and substantive contributions from such fields as anthropology, business administration, ecology, economics, geography, history, hospitality, leisure, planning, political science, psychology, recreation, religion, sociology, transportation, etc., but it significantly favors state-of-the-art presentations, works featuring new directions, and especially the cross-fertilization of perspectives beyond each of these singular fields. While the development and production of this book series is fashioned after the successful model of Annals of Tourism Research, the TSSSeries further aspires to assure each theme a comprehensiveness possible only in book-length academic treatment. Each volume in the series is intended to deal with a particular aspect of this increasingly important subject, thus to play a definitive role in the enlarging and strengthening of the foundation of knowledge in the field of tourism, and consequently to expand the frontiers of knowledge into the new research and scholarship horizons ahead.
Published TSSSeries titles:
Title Page
Tourism Social Science Series
Volume 24
Authenticity & Tourism: Materialities, Perceptions, Experiences
JILLIAN M. RICKLY
University of Nottingham, UK
ELIZABETH S. VIDON
SUNY-ESF, USA
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK
First edition 2018
Copyright © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-78754-817-6 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-78754-816-9 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-78754-818-3 (EPub)
ISSN: 1571-5043 (Series)
Dedication
This volume is dedicated to Professor Daniel Knudsen, our friend, our mentor, our favorite philosopher.
List of Figures
Chapter 2 | ||
Figure 1 | Image of Destination Welcome Sign to Napa Valley | 22 |
Chapter 4 | ||
Figure 1 | The Farm Photographed in 2017 | 62 |
Figure 2 | Tourists in Cacao Plantation | 63 |
Figure 3 | Tourists in the Chocolate Factory | 63 |
Chapter 5 | ||
Figure 1 | Balcony, Juliet’s Statue, and Love Notes | 78 |
Figure 2 | Views of the Balcony and Associated Scenes | 79 |
Chapter 6 | ||
Figure 1 | Panyard Locations in Trinidad and Tobago | 91 |
Figure 2 | Steelpan Events and Locations in Trinidad and Tobago | 104 |
Figure 3 | A Makeshift Pantent in Port of Spain with Authentic Steelpans | 105 |
Figure 4 | Three Children on a Hill in Tobago Playing for the Author | 106 |
Chapter 7 | ||
Figure 1 | Location of the Schist Villages Network in Portugal | 116 |
Chapter 8 | ||
Figure 1 | “Real Ireland” | 138 |
Figure 2 | Cottage Rathbaun Farm Co. Galway | 139 |
Figure 3 | Red-haired Young Man | 140 |
Figure 4 | Oliver St. John Gogarty’s Bar in Temple Bar, Dublin | 141 |
Figure 5 | Thinking of Ireland | 142 |
Chapter 9 | ||
Figure 1 | Themes Depicting the Interrelationships in Authentic Food Definitions | 158 |
Figure 2 | Erik’s Memorable Gastronomic Experience | 160 |
Chapter 11 | ||
Figure 1 | Canterbury Christ Church “Golden Night” Event | 189 |
Figure 2 | Canterbury Cathedral, Cathedrales en Lumière | 191 |
Figure 3 | Amiens Chroma | 193 |
Chapter 12 | ||
Figure 1 | Organizational Framework to Incorporate Ethics in Ecotourism | 205 |
Figure 2 | Organizational Framework for Nature-based Tourism Products | 210 |
Figure 3 | Locations of Pain Receptors of Rainbow Trout | 211 |
Figure 4 | Northern Luangwa National Park and Nsefu Game Reserve | 214 |
Chapter 13 | ||
Figure 1 | Sunrise from Bald Mountain, Adirondacks | 227 |
Chapter 14 | ||
Figure 1 | Touring Angkor Wat | 239 |
List of Tables
Chapter 3 | ||
Table 1 | Posts by Category of Interpreted Authenticity | 39 |
Table 2 | Top 10 Commented Posts | 39 |
Table 3 | Top 10 Liked (and Reacted) Posts | 40 |
Table 4 | Authentic Inquiry Based on Question Types Proposed (N = 113) | 41 |
Table 5 | Authentic Production Categories (N = 86) | 44 |
Table 6 | Authentic Encounter Categories (N = 37) | 49 |
Chapter 7 | ||
Table 1 | Evolution of Indicators of National Tourism | 113 |
Table 2 | Evolution of Indicators of Rural Tourism | 114 |
Table 3 | Tourist Respondents (N = 441) | 118 |
Table 4 | Residents Respondents (N = 218) | 119 |
Table 5 | Economic Operators (N = 51) | 119 |
Table 6 | Entity Respondents (N = 41) | 120 |
Table 7 | Test of Significance among the Three Stakeholder Groups | 122 |
Chapter 9 | ||
Table 1 | Benefits of Photo-elicitation | 149 |
Table 2 | Four Qualities to Frame Authentic Food | 151 |
Table 3 | Quotes from Participants on Authenticity of Food | 156 |
Table 4 | Authentic Bolognese Sauce Themes | 157 |
Afterword | ||
Table 1 | Characterizing Authenticity | 254 |
Preface
October 2016. I am standing on a train platform in Bolzano-Bozen, in the heart of South Tyrol and gateway to the Italian Dolomites, having just spent three days at the “Authenticity & Tourism” workshop. Enjoying the ambiance of the variety of languages that surrounded me on that platform, an animated voice with familiar accent caught my ear: Americans! In most instances I would keep to myself, but hearing them mention “the folks back in Kentucky” drew me closer and I felt compelled to say hello and comment on the small world – me born and raised in southern Indiana, United States, running into people from the “Bluegrass” state in Italy.
When asked why I was in Bolzano, I said simply, “a conference”, hoping not to have to talk about authenticity anymore, at least for a few days anyway.
Immediately, though, they asked for further details; “oh, well, um, on authenticity in tourism,” I said.
“Oh! Really!,” replied one man.
“That sounds interesting!,” exclaimed his companion.
Then, the first man pushed, “like what about authenticity?”, to which I responded, “well, the big question that is debated in my area of research is whether authenticity matters to tourists.”
Thinking, hoping, this would sum it up and the train would arrive already. It, of course, only opened the can of worms ….
“Of course. Of course, it matters! It matters so much when I’m travelling”, he started to explain.
I could not help myself, “oh yeah. So what types of things are you looking for when you travel? Authenticity in what sense?”
The man, and his two companions, paused for a moment of thinking before they started to mumble and get a bit tongue-tied, finally saying, “well, um, you know … the culture, stuff like that”, as another spoke up, “right, the places and the people, and…”, interrupted by another, “yeah, yeah, like that and history….”
Just then the train pulled into the station and through the noise and rush to get on board and find our seats, I did not see them again, which was fine. I was not especially in the mood to spend the next four hours to Munich discussing the issue (the past three days had been enough). As I settled into my seat, I jotted down notes on the encounter and chuckled. Does authenticity matter? Of course it does, but in ways no one has been able to fully pin down, not even the tourists who are out there searching for it. Perhaps that is what makes it so interesting for academics and for tourists – the chase.
This book has been inspired not by this moment alone, but innumerable moments like this: encounters with tourists through research, with fellow tourists while on holiday, and with myself reflexively questioning what I hope to find (and why I am sometimes disappointed with the reality). With a decade of research on the topic, I am only slightly further along in understanding this elusive concept, but just as eager to keep chasing it.
Jillian M. Rickly
- Prelims
- Chapter 1 Introduction: From Pseudo-Events to Authentic Experiences
- Marketing Maneuvers
- Chapter 2 Looking for Authenticity in Product Geography
- Chapter 3 “See You in Iran” on Facebook: Assessing User-Generated Authenticity
- Chapter 4 Marketing and Authenticity in Tourism: A Cacao Farm in Brazil
- Cultural (Mis)Interpretations
- Chapter 5 Love, Romance, and Behavior: Finding Juliet, Finding Meaning
- Chapter 6 Authenticity of a National Icon: The Trinidad Steelpan as a Tourism Resource
- Chapter 7 Authenticity in Portugal’s Interior Rural Areas
- Technological Interventions
- Chapter 8 Tourists’ Photographic Constructions of Place in Ireland
- Chapter 9 Understanding Authenticity Within Gastronomic Experiences
- Chapter 10 Digital Revolution or Plastic Gimmick? Authenticity in 3D Souvenirs
- Chapter 11 Hyperreal Light Simulacra: Performing Heritage Buildings
- Theoretical Inquiries
- Chapter 12 Hunting and Fishing as Ecotourism: The Authenticity Debate
- Chapter 13 Authenticating the Wilderness: Power, Politics, Performance
- Chapter 14 An Autoethnographic Reflection: Western Elitism in Late Capitalism
- Afterword: Authenticity and Life
- References
- Acknowledgments
- About the Authors
- Index