Being a Tourist

Finding Meaning in Pleasure Travel

By Julia Harrison
Categories: Social Sciences, Anthropology, Popular Culture, Communication & Media Studies
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774809771, 272 pages, November 2002
Paperback : 9780774809788, 272 pages, July 2003
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774850391, 272 pages, October 2007

Table of contents

Acknowledgments

1 Being a Tourist

2 Making Connections

3 The Tourist Aesthetic

4 Journeying Home

5 Colouring the World’s Map

6 Coming Back

Notes

Travellers’ Biographies

References Cited

Index

Description

What is meaningful about the experience of travelling abroad? What
feeds the impulse to explore new horizons? In Being a Tourist,
Harrison analyzes her conversations with a large group of
upper-middle-class travellers. Why, she asks, do these people invest
their resources -- financial, emotional, psychological, and physical --
in this activity? Harrison suggests that they are fuelled by several
desires, including a search for intimacy and connection, an expression
of personal aesthetic, an exploration of the understanding of
"home," and a sensemaking strategy for a globalized world.
She also reflects on the moral and political complexities of the
travels of these people.

Being a Tourist draws on a wide range of social theory,
going beyond current debates of authenticity and consumption.
Engagingly and thoughtfully written, it will be required reading for
those in anthropology, sociology, cultural studies, and, more
generally, for anyone interested in tourism studies and travel
writing.

Reviews

The flavor is ethnographic and particularistic; Harrison provides many conceptual frames through which to view the experiences of her interviewees, yet their own voices come through. This retention of individuality makes the book unique, providing an unusual narrative depth. The author's command of the theoretical literature is impressive ... Highly recommended.

- C. Hendershott