scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Tourist Photography and the Reverse Gaze

Alex Gillespie
- 01 Sep 2006 - 
- Vol. 34, Iss: 3, pp 343-366
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors argue that tourists, when they feel the reverse gaze, are not taking the actual perspective of Ladakhis, but are instead attributing their own critical attitudes toward other tourist photographers to the Ladakhi photographee.
Abstract
The interaction between tourist photographer and local photographee is a dynamic site of identity construction. To date, this interaction has been theorized mainly in terms of the power of the tourist photographer, which has been shown to mediate and commodify local cultures and create new identities amongst those photographed. The present article contributes a change of emphasis by examining the sociopsychological dynamics of the reverse gaze and its role in constructing the emerging identity of the photographer. The reverse gaze refers to the gaze of the photographee on the photographer as perceived by the photographer. Data from Ladakh, a popular backpacker tourist destination in northern India, illustrates how the reverse gaze of Ladakhis can constitute the emerging tourist self, stimulating uncomfortable social emotions, such as embarrassment. The question raised by the article is, what sociopsychological processes constitute the power of the reverse gaze to position the tourist photographer? In this article, I argue that tourists, when they feel the reverse gaze, are not taking the actual perspective of Ladakhis, but are instead attributing their own critical attitudes toward other tourist photographers to the Ladakhi photographee. Thus, the discomfort that a tourist in Ladakh feels when caught in the reverse gaze, I argue, is a product of that tourist being positioned in the same disparaging way as that tourist usually positions other tourist photographers.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

TOURIST PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE REVERSE GAZE
(To be published in Ethos, 2006)
Alex Gillespie (alex.gillespie@stir.ac.uk)
Department of Psychology
University of Stirling
Stirling, FK9 4LA
Scotland
UK
Tel: + 44 (0) 1786 466841
Fax: + 44 (0) 1786 467641
By-line: Alex Gillespie is a Lecturer in Social Psychology in the Department of
Psychology, University of Stirling, Scotland.
Running head: The reverse gaze

The reverse gaze
2
ABSTRACT
The interaction between tourist photographer and local photographee is a dynamic site of
identity construction. To date, this interaction has been theorized mainly in terms of the
power of the tourist photographer, which has been shown to mediate and commodify local
cultures and create new identities amongst those photographed. The present article
contributes a change of emphasis by examining the socio-psychological dynamics of the
reverse gaze and its role in constructing the emerging identity of the photographer. The
reverse gaze refers to the gaze of the photographee upon the photographer as perceived by
the photographer. Data from Ladakh, a popular backpacker tourist destination in northern
India, illustrates how the reverse gaze of Ladakhis can constitute the emerging tourist self,
stimulating uncomfortable social emotions, such as embarrassment. The question raised
by the article is, what socio-psychological processes constitute the power of the reverse
gaze to position the tourist photographer? The article argues that tourists, when they feel
the reverse gaze, are not taking the actual perspective of Ladakhis, but are instead
attributing their own critical attitudes toward other tourist photographers to the Ladakhi
photographee. Thus the discomfort that a tourist in Ladakh feels when caught in the
reverse gaze, it is argued, is a product of that tourist being positioned in the same
disparaging way as that tourist usually positions other tourist photographers.
Key Terms: Tourism, Reverse Gaze, India, George Herbert Mead, Positioning,

The reverse gaze
3
The interaction between tourist photographer and local photographee is a clearly
identifiable genre of interaction that is reproduced, in various ways, across the world.
Concepts in tourism research, such as Urry’s (1990) ‘tourist gaze,’ have tended to endow
the tourist behind the camera with much power (e.g., Crawshaw and Urry 1997). The
tourist gaze, objectified in the camera, is said to have the power to create a cultural revival
(Bruner 2005:119), commodify local culture (Philip and Mercer 1999) and cultivate new
forms of self-consciousness amongst the local citizens (Tilley 1999). However, the
photographer-photographee relation is a complex interaction with at least two sides
(Cohen et al. 1992). It is not only the photographee who is influenced by the interaction,
so too is the photographer. The photographer-photographee interaction is a boundary
(Barth 1969). At this boundary, the dynamic and situated emergence not only of the
photographee self, but also of the tourist photographer self, is evident. The photographee
can gaze upon the tourist photographer, and this “reverse gaze” can play an important role
in constituting the emerging self of the tourist photographer.
CHARACTERIZING THE REVERSE GAZE
The reverse gaze is clearly evident in an unusual interaction that I observed during
fieldwork in Ladakh, northern India. The interaction occurred at a cultural festival that had
been arranged by Women’s Alliance, a local NGO, in order to display Ladakhi culture to
Western tourists. The audience comprised a couple of hundred foreign tourists and

The reverse gaze
4
Ladakhis sitting and standing in a wide circle. At the centre of the circle was an open
space where troupes of traditionally dressed Ladakhi women took turns to sing and dance.
In this type of situation it is expected that tourists will take photographs, and most tourists
were availing of the opportunity. However, not all the tourist cameras were trained upon
the dancing women. Several tourists were openly photographing traditional-looking
Ladakhis in the audience.
Figure 1: My photograph of a tourist photographing a traditionally dressed Ladakhi
woman

The reverse gaze
5
Figure 1 shows a picture I took of a Ladakhi woman being photographed by a French
tourist with a telephoto lens. This particular Ladakhi comes from the remote village of
Drass. She is wearing a homespun woolen dress, with traditional jewelry and traditional
shoes. Adorning her head is an impressive arrangement of flowers. In many ways she
crystallizes tourists’ imagination of Ladakh. Tourists visit Ladakh expecting it to be
broadly equivalent to Tibet (Dodin and Räther 2001). As with Tibet, Ladakh is imagined
to be spiritual and timeless, and Ladakhis are imagined to practice colorful traditions
(Bishop 1989; Lopez 1998). The dress and manner of this Ladakhi woman, more than
many other Ladakhis at the festival, conformed to these expectations. Accordingly, she
was the focus of many tourist cameras. Indeed, during the course of fourteen minutes I
counted twenty-one different tourists photographing her. Some of the tourists requested if
they could take her photograph, and some even posed with her, but the majority did not
ask for permission. Overall she was obliging, though noticeably she did joke with one
tourist by pretending to dodge the tourist’s photographic gaze. The Frenchman in Figure 1
was the most active photographer that I observed. He followed the Ladakhi woman around
the festival taking photographs, and when she sat down, he took up his position in Figure
1. By this time, the Frenchman’s relentless photographing had been noticed by other
tourists.
Shortly after I took the photograph in Figure 1, a female tourist, nearby the photogenic
Ladakhi woman, offered the Ladakhi her camera while pointing toward the Frenchman.
The Ladakhi woman accepted the camera and began pointing it toward the French
photographer, and me, behind him. She was imitating or “ventriloquating” the actions of
tourists she had seen so many times before. Figure 2, another photograph taken by me,

Citations
More filters
Dissertation

Material memory : the work of late Sickert, 1927-42

Merlin Seller
TL;DR: The authors argue that late Sickert was as significant and complex as the Sickert of Camden Town, and explore the richness of the historically specific ways a major British artist's previously neglected corpus functioned.
Journal ArticleDOI

How They See Us: Perceived Effects of Tourist Gaze on the Old Order Amish:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the perceived impacts of tourist gazing within the framework of resistance theory and find that the Old Order Amish are positioned on a resistance scale, with an open-resistance stance at one end and a full-cooperation stance at the opposite end of the spectrum.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tourists to Lhasa, Tibet: How Local Youth Classify, Understand and Respond to Different Types of Travelers

TL;DR: The authors explored how tourists are viewed in three different settings in the context of Lhasa, Tibet and found that tolerance towards most types of tourists is high, though it varies subtly for different groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hell is other people? An existential-phenomenological analysis of the local gaze in tourism.

TL;DR: In this article, an existential-phenomenological perspective is adopted to understand tourists' lived experiences of being gazed upon by local people, and they show that experiencing the local gaze exposes the tourist as Sartrean "Tourist-like": an inauthentic experiencer of positivity, discrimination, alienation and self-consciousness.
References
More filters
Book

The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life

TL;DR: For instance, in the case of an individual in the presence of others, it can be seen as a form of involuntary expressive behavior as discussed by the authors, where the individual will have to act so that he intentionally or unintentionally expresses himself, and the others will in turn have to be impressed in some way by him.
Book

Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison

TL;DR: Foucault shows the development of the Western system of prisons, police organizations, administrative and legal hierarchies for social control and the growth of disciplinary society as a whole as discussed by the authors.
Book

The Invention of Tradition

TL;DR: This article explored examples of this process of invention -the creation of Welsh Scottish national culture, the elaboration of British royal rituals in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the origins of imperial ritual in British India and Africa, and the attempts by radical movements to develop counter-traditions of their own.
Frequently Asked Questions (1)
Q1. What are the contributions in this paper?

MacCannell et al. this paper argued that the tourist gaze can facilitate the second gaze by redirecting the gaze of the tourist away from the toured and back to the tourist, making contradictions salient and questioning motivations. 

Trending Questions (1)
How many tourists visited Ladakh in 2019?

Thus, the discomfort that a tourist in Ladakh feels when caught in the reverse gaze, I argue, is a product of that tourist being positioned in the same disparaging way as that tourist usually positions other tourist photographers.