Real things, tourist things and drawing the line in the ocean

    Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperChapter

    Abstract

    Western beliefs about reality are steeped in the idea of a single, pure or true reality that can be isolated from various substitute realities. Representations are early examples of these substitutions, fuelling scepticism towards art and photography (Kardaun, 2000; Jay, 1993) as well as tourism" a producer of contrived experiences and staged encounters. As a copyist par excellence, tourism creates these (falser) experiences of reality through technologies including photography and art, theme parks, museums and interpretation centres, and with tactics like miniaturisation, façadia and scripting (Cohen, 1988; Urry, 2002; Urry and Larson, 2011). The tourist gaze (Urry, 1990) itself follows Foucault's (1976) conceptualisation of the gaze as a technology that represents the world in a selective and particular way. In producing a partial view of reality, the creative potential of these technologies and strategies are often by-passed in favour of the dominant interpretation that, in representing reality, tourism routinely debases it (Deleuze and Kraus, 1983, p.183). This distinction between reality and representation is traced to Plato's ideal forms and a long anxiety about what is "really real" that is evident through Descartes' meditations and in the epistemological sovereignty of modern science (Latour, 1999).
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationTourism Encounters and Controversies: Ontological Politics of Tourism Development
    EditorsGunnar Thor Johannesson, Carina Ren, Rene van der Duim
    Place of PublicationU.K.
    PublisherAshgate
    Pages97-112
    Number of pages16
    ISBN (Electronic)9781472424372
    ISBN (Print)9781472424365
    Publication statusPublished - 2015

    Keywords

    • tourism
    • reality
    • ocean
    • sustainable tourism
    • museums

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