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The Tourist Gaze (Published in association with Theory, Culture & Society)
 
 
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The Tourist Gaze (Published in association with Theory, Culture & Society) [Paperback]

John Urry
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 184 pages
  • Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd; Second Edition edition (10 Jan 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0761973478
  • ISBN-13: 978-0761973478
  • Product Dimensions: 23 x 15.6 x 1.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 390,111 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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John Urry
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Review

The original Tourist Gaze was a classic, marking out a new land to study and appreciate. This new edition extends into fresh areas with the same passion and insight of the object. Even more essential reading! Nigel Thrift Vice-Chancellor, Warwick University
The first edition of Tourist Gaze was a landmark in the theoretical development of tourism studies, and it inspired waves of research and often fierce debates that have reverberated over the following two decades. This new edition of the book is not only thoroughly revised but has also been given renewed cutting edge, particularly by the addition of chapters on risk and on digital photography. At the same time, our understanding of the tourist gaze has been reframed and broadened by the infusion of ideas about mobility and embodiment, making this book an essential read for every tourism scholar Allan Williams Professor of Tourism Management, University of Surrey
Don't leave home without the 3rd edition! With new chapters and rigorous restructuring, this classic guide to critical tourism studies becomes even more useful to scholars and students across the social sciences and humanities. The Tourist Gaze 3.0 takes us on a detailed tour of the major concepts and approaches to one of the world's largest culture industries. With fresh insights and new materials, this collaboratively written revision will immediately become required reading for those who pay attention to the world of travel, mobility, and visual culture Caren Kaplan Professor of Cultural Studies, Science and Technology, UC Davis
A great classic remade to capture the lives of tourists in the 21st century. For two decades The Tourist Gaze has been one of the most influential books in tourist research. This new and thoroughly reworked version meets the challenges of a changing world of tourism and engages the lively contemporary debates in the field Orvar Lofgren Professor of European Ethnology, University of Lund
This thoroughly updated edition of John Urry's seminal contribution to tourist studies will engage a whole new generation of scholars. The extensive addition of new material absorbs and expands upon new insights from within this shifting field of study to develop an enhanced understanding of the tourist gaze. The fresh input of Jonas Larsen adds a renewed vibrancy to the debates which are, as ever, communicated in a brisk, inclusive and lucid fashion, and will ensure that The Tourist Gaze book retains its relevance for students and academics across the world Tim Edensor Reader in Cultural Geography, Manchester Metropolitan University
The Tourist Gaze has been the most influential book on tourism in the last twenty years. This extensively revised edition serves to remind us both why the original was so important and engages with the massive developments in the literature it helped to spawn. The impressive updating in response to theoretical debates is matched only by the response to the profound shifts in tourism itself, its markets, technologies and organisation, which indicates how much value still lies in the arguments made Mike Crang Reader in Geography, Durham University
Few scholarly books manage to be deeply serious and highly entertaining, but The Tourist Gaze has been absorbing its readers for more than two decades. This newly expanded third edition of Urry's classic is a landmark in its own right; deepening and broadening its approach to the study of tourism in the era of the internet, global warming and peak oil. This book's rich blend of cultural history, political economy and social enquiry takes us to the heart of some of the most urgent issues of our time Meaghan Morris Professor of Gender and Cultural Studies, University of Sydney
The book covers a wide range of tourist-gaze interwoven topics such as theories; mass tourism; economies; working under the gaze; changing tourist cultures; places, buildings and design; vision and photography; performances; risks and futures which function as distinctive chapters within the book, along with an extremely generous bibliography and an index list...With an analytical discourse and the power of exemplification, the tacking of up-to-date emerging trends in tourist behavior and the authors' genuine ability to read it, the book invites to a critical observation and meditation on today's "society of spectacle" towards which tourism is heading to, meanwhile bringing a great contribution to tourism research and theoretical development GeoJournal of Tourism and Geosites
--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Review

'There is much to be applauded here...this is an engaging and thought provoking book which should be read by those interested in advertising and the changing nature of contemporary culture' - Contemporary Sociology 'The book is written in a very accessible style that would serve as a good point of entry for anyone interested in leisure, tourism, and cultural change in contemporary societies. The scope of Urry's book is breathtaking, one is left with a feeling of coming to terms with the complex set of social relations that are tourism, both in their production and consumption' - Planning Practice and Research

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First Sentence
The subject of this book would appear to have nothing whatsoever to do with the serious world of medicine and the medical gaze that concerns Foucault. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Still too visual 4 Oct 2002
Format:Paperback
I read Urry's tourist gaze a couple of years ago when I first started studying tourism. His ideas offered a frame work that many tourism researchers refer to. It was very exciting for me then.

Since I first read the first edition, I have also read many criticisms against his thoughts. Urry acknowledges these criticisms but he still largely ignores these charges in this new book. That is puzzling to me. So, in the second edition of his "classic", Urry revises or more accurately, merely tinkers with his original tourist gaze ideas.

Tourism research today has moved towards tourism experiences. Urry seems to be stucked with his visual gazes. I therefore wonder why one should buy his second edition even though his examples are now more international (I bought it because I do not own the first edition).

Other tourism researchers, such as Richard Prentice (on heritage interpretation), and Can-Seng Ooi (on mediated tourism consumption) have shown that the tourist gaze, as a concept, is highly inadequate. There is a need to look at the many different ways tourists interpret and consume tourism products beyond the visual. Such researchers emphasise the point that tourism is an industry that sells experiences. Urry seems to be stuck with just selling visual sights.

Nonetheless, Urry's conceptualisation remains central in tourism research. Almost every tourism article and book quotes him. It has become a classic and all tourism students must own a copy. Maybe it is time for a new classic. The three stars are for his original contribution to the debate.

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Visual gazes 4 Oct 2002
Format:Paperback
I read Urry's tourist gaze a couple of years ago when I first started studying tourism. His ideas offered a frame work that many tourism researchers refer to. It was very exciting for me then.

Since I first read the first edition, I have also read many criticisms against his thoughts. Urry acknowledges these criticisms but he still largely ignores these charges in this new book. That is puzzling to me. So, in the second edition of his "classic", Urry revises or more accurately, merely tinkers with his original tourist gaze ideas.

Tourism research today has moved towards tourism experiences. Urry seems to be stucked with his visual gazes. I therefore wonder why one should buy his second edition even though his examples are now more international (I bought it because I do not own the first edition).

Other tourism researchers, such as Richard Prentice (on heritage interpretation), and Can-Seng Ooi (on mediated tourism consumption) have shown that the tourist gaze, as a concept, is highly inadequate. There is a need to look at the many different ways tourists interpret and consume tourism products beyond the visual. Such researchers emphasise the point that tourism is an industry that sells experiences. Urry seems to be stuck with just selling visual sights.

Nonetheless, Urry's conceptualisation remains central in tourism research. Almost every tourism article and book quotes him. It has become a classic and all tourism students must own a copy. Maybe it is time for a new classic. The three stars are for his original contribution to the debate.

Comment | 
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