Tourism : an introduction
Citations
[...]
970 citations
Cites background from "Tourism : an introduction"
...There is little sense of the complexity by which different visitors can gaze upon the same set of objects and read and perform them in a different ways (see Urry, 1996; Franklin, 2003)....
[...]
...It is said that tourists have become bored of being mere spectators and that many tourism activities – adventure tourism – explicitly provide active, multi-sensuous bodily sensations, affect and actions (Cloke and Perkins, 1998; Franklin and Crang, 2001: 12; Bell and Lyall, 2002; Franklin, 2003)....
[...]
799 citations
233 citations
Cites background from "Tourism : an introduction"
...Rather it is seen as integral to wider processes of economic and political development processes and even constitutive of everyday life (Coles & Hall, 2006; Edensor, 2007; Franklin, 2003; Franklin & Crang, 2001; Hannam & Knox, 2010)....
[...]
229 citations
204 citations
Cites background from "Tourism : an introduction"
...Last-chance tourism, from this perspective, provides a unique opportunity to nurture environmental awareness, for visitors to realise that they ‘are the potential saviours of nature, not, inevitably its enemy’ (Franklin, 2003, p. 220, 30)....
[...]
References
[...]
970 citations
799 citations
233 citations
229 citations
204 citations