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Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Forward-looking and innovative, Elgar Research Agendas are an essential resource for PhD students, scholars and anybody who wants to be at the forefront of research.Original and thought-provoking, this Research Agenda investigates the many ways in which tourism is gendered. It outlines current thought and directions for future research, looking forward by imagining and challenging the ways that gender will continue to intersect with and impact on tourism, as well as looking back to trace the key developments and contributions in gendered thinking.Chapters consider and rethink gender in the context of tourism from multiple vantage points, contexts and perspectives. Divided into three parts, the Research Agenda reflects key threads in a contemporary research agenda: gender theory, analysis and review; gender, tourism and work; and gendered tourism experiences. Bringing together a range of diverse and inclusive contributions, it moves beyond binary assumptions of ‘women'and ‘men'towards the intersectionalities among gender, race, class, sexuality and power in relation to tourism.Highlighting emerging research in the field, along with the methods and paradigms that are at the forefront of gendered tourism research, this Research Agenda will be an invigorating read for critical tourism researchers as well as gender researchers and those in the social sciences more broadly.
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Starting slow: thinking through slow mobilities and experiences Speeding up and slowing down: pelgrimage and slow travel through time On the periphery of pleasure: hedonics, eudaimonics and slow travel Slow'n down the town to let nature grow: ecotourism, social justice and sustainability The contradictions and paradoxes of slow food: environmental change, sustainability and the conservation of taste Eat your way through culture: gastronomic tourism as performance and bodily experience 'Make haste slowly': environmental sustainability and willing workers on organic farms Gendered cultures of slow travel: women's cycle touring as an alternative hedonism Wandering Australia: independent travellers and slow journeys through time and space Alternative mobility cultures and the resurgence of hitch-hiking 'If you're making waves then you have to slow down': slow tourism and canals Travellin' around On Yukon Time in Canada's North 'Fast Japan, slow Japan': shifting to slow tourism as a rural regeneration tool in Japan Tribe tourism: a case study of the tribewanted project on Vorovoro, Fiji Slow tourism initiatives: an exploratory study of Dutch lifestyles entrepreneurs in France Slow travel and Indian culture: philosophical and practical aspects Reflecting upon slow travel and tourism experiences
Tourism --- Social movements. --- #SBIB:39A5 --- #SBIB:316.7C440 --- 379.85 --- toerisme --- slow tourism --- Movements, Social --- Social history --- Social psychology --- Psychological aspects. --- Kunst, habitat, materiële cultuur en ontspanning --- Toerisme en vakantie: algemeen --- toerisme - algemeen --- Vrijetijdsreizen. Toerisme --- 379.85 Vrijetijdsreizen. Toerisme --- Social movements --- Psychological aspects --- PXL-Media & Tourism 2014 --- sociale aspecten --- psychologische aspecten --- Duurzaam toerisme --- Vervoer
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Bringing together scholars from the areas of tourism, leisure and cultural studies, eco-humanities and tourism management, this book examines the emerging phenomenon of slow tourism. The book explores the range of travel experiences that are part of growing consumer concerns with quality leisure time, environmental and cultural sustainability, as well as the embodied experience of place. Slow tourism encapsulates a range of lifestyle practices, mobilities and ethics that are connected to social movements such as slow food and cities, as well as specialist sectors such as ecotourism and voluntourism. The slow experience of temporality can evoke and incite different ways of being and moving, as well as different logics of desire that value travel experiences as forms of knowledge. Slow travel practices reflect a range of ethical-political positions that have yet to be critically explored in the academic literature despite the growth of industry discourse.
Tourism --- Social movements. --- Psychological aspects. --- Movements, Social --- Social history --- Social psychology --- Social movements --- Psychological aspects --- E-books --- ecotourism. --- environmental change. --- hedonism. --- slow food. --- slow mobilities. --- slow tourism initiatives. --- slow tourism. --- slow travel. --- sustainable tourism. --- tourist experience. --- travel experiences. --- volunteer tourism.
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