Tourism as an Anthropological Subject [and Comments and Reply]
1981; University of Chicago Press; Volume: 22; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1086/202722
ISSN1537-5382
AutoresDennison Nash, Anne V. Akeroyd, John J. Bodine, Erik Cohen, Graham M. S. Dann, Dymphna Hermans, Jafar Jafari, Robert V. Kemper, Alan G. LaFlamme, Frank E. Manning, Raymond Noronha, Oriol Pi‐Sunyer, Valene L. Smith, Richard W. Stoffle, J. M. Thurot, Karen Ann Watson‐Gegeo, David Wilson,
Tópico(s)Hospitality and Tourism Education
ResumoThis paper provides a critical evaluationof the growing number of anthropologically oriented studies of tourism and proposes a conceptual framework for future studies. A cross-culturally viable definition of tourism is offered. This definition, which conceives of the tourist as a person at leisure who travels and of tourism as a variety of leisure activity, suggest a transactional view of tourism that involves an encounter between tourist-generating and host societies. Such an encounter may be conceived of as a process or a system. Following this definition, it is possible ot identify tourism at all levels of sociocultural complexity. At present it does not seem possible to discover the causes of tourism, but one can begin to account for intra-or intersocietal touristic variability. Anthropological consideration of this latter is not well developed. Rather, interest has been centered on the consequences of tourism for host societies, particularly in the developing world. So far, thought, these studies have not demonstrated much methodological or theoretical sophistication. Though some variety of exchange theory may ultimately prove the best way of organizing an overview of the touristic process or system, less ambitious perspectives would seem to be, for the moment, indicated.
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