Course Sites

postmodernism in tourism

Welcome to CNDLS Course Sites

Welcome to Course Sites from the Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship (CNDLS)!

If you are looking for a Commons Blogs site, please email us at [email protected] .

CNDLS Course Sites use WordPress to allow for the easy creation of a course-specific site where students may publish or even create their own sites. There are two approaches, when requesting a course site: 

  • Use one course site for you and all your students to contribute to;
  • Use a hub-and-spoke model where you as faculty manage one central course site, while each student owns their own site as well. Students can use their sites as a blog or ePortfolio. 

These sites can be made public or private to only students and teachers in the course. Additionally, non-Georgetown users can be added to the sites.

We have created a Resources page to help get you and your students started in WordPress. You can also email [email protected] to request a consultation or schedule a class visit.

Looking for a more flexible website for your course or research? Visit Georgetown.domains .

Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.

To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to  upgrade your browser .

Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link.

  • We're Hiring!
  • Help Center

paper cover thumbnail

Postmodern Tourism and Post-Tourist Behaviors

Profile image of Aylin  Nalçacı İkiz

2019, Current Issues in Tourism and Hospitality Management

In this section, the concept of postmodernism, the phenomenon of postmodern consumption, the concept of postmodern consumer, postmodern tourism, and the concept of post-tourist are aimed to be informed and a general evaluation is made about these concepts.

Related Papers

J. of Tourism and Hospitality Management

Mauro Dujmovic

postmodernism in tourism

Journal of Policy & Governance

Alla Pecheniuk

This article examines contemporary scientific approaches to the issues of postmodern transformations of rural tourism development. The contradictions between the present postmodern society and the information-technological development of the rural areas in Ukraine are highlighted. Evidently, Ukraine does not fully use the new opportunities that emanate as a result of globalization of an economy. The main indicators of postmodern influences, such as informational and technological, political, social, socio-cultural, and personal (psychological), are earmarked featured. The characteristics of evolving social relations are also determined as premodern (archaic), modern and postmodern relations in the societies in particular context of tourism development. The factors influencing the postmodern tourism consumerism include the awareness of the social crisis, escape from reality, mundane avoidance, search for the self and self-realization, overcoming psychological trauma, the illusion of ...

Tm-technisches Messen

Milan Novovic

Turisticko poslovanje

Diana Alexandru

Laszlo Arva

Has our society already become postmodern or is it still modern? Has postmodernity replaced modernity in business sciences (as modernity replaced traditionality in the second half of the nineteenth century) or do both modernity and postmodernity exist and shape the practice and theory of the different disciplines together? These dilemmas represent a major concern for a small group of researchers not only in the fields of sociology and business but also in other sciences. The aim of the present paper is to evaluate the extent to which postmodernity can be identified in the field of tourism marketing as well as to see practical cases for its appearance in Hungary and its acceptance by local people.

Annals of Tourism Research

Natan Uriely

F. Xavier Medina

Tourism, as any other massive phenomenon has suffered a deep change tightly linked to social change, where internet and social media are playing an important role. Tourism has changed both in form and contents. While in the past tourism was some kind of elitist activity (high cost and culture) nowadays it has become a mass tourism/entertainment (low cost and culture) that, though fragmented, is presenting new trends within the tourism/travel industry and leisure activity all over the world where Europe is not an exception. From a quantitative perspective, an overview of the international new and traditional tourism trends are presented in this article. This new tourism is turning into a new social phenomenon in complete transformation, where outbound travel market is offering new possibilities for emergent countries, and where new forms of tourism are appearing, supported by a flourishing tourism/travel industry. From the qualitative point of view, this paper brings into considerati...

Sune Rasmussen

Presentation of post-modern marketing in tourism industry. The manuscript demonstrates the theoretical framework of post-modern marketing and post modern tourism and presents case studies on the analysed subject.

RELATED PAPERS

Leukemia Research

Enilze S F Ribeiro

José Luis de Madaria

Aliaksandr Zimnitski

Central Bank Review

Sumru Altug

Adrian J Barker

Latin American Journal of Aquatic Research

Luisa Saavedra

Mar Gallego

Sukaji Bruth

Nanomagnetism

Leon Gunther

UCOARTE. Revista de Teoría e Historia del Arte

Minerva Parra-Peralbo

Journal of Empowerment

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry

Robert Finlay-Jones

Swati Bandyopadhyay

Analytical and Bioanalytical Electrochemistry

Jean-paul Chopart

Case Reports in Ophthalmology

Ahmed Al Hinai

IET Generation, Transmission & Distribution

Sasa Djokic

Jurnal Lektur Keagamaan

Adi Megandani

Stella Fanok

Giselle Venancio

fatima hellal

International Review of Qualitative Research

Dina Brode-Roger

José Manuel Martos

ARACELI JACOBO AZUARA

Arts & Health

Jinous Tahmassebi

RELATED TOPICS

  •   We're Hiring!
  •   Help Center
  • Find new research papers in:
  • Health Sciences
  • Earth Sciences
  • Cognitive Science
  • Mathematics
  • Computer Science
  • Academia ©2024

Welcome to Fabulous Roswell: The Rise of Postmodern Tourism

What Chernobyl, Las Vegas, and a Santa Claus theme park in Finland tell us about the value and absurdity of travel

RTR53UT_wide.jpg

In the coming months, Chernobyl will open for sightseeing. Each year, more and more people try to sneak in to North Korea. Ever been to Branson, Missouri? Ironically?

Probably not. These are all odd locations, almost the opposite of what most people would aim for when planning a vacation, yet they draw more and more onlookers every year. Abandoned shopping malls and decrepit factories are the folly of an ever-growing urban exploration movement. Sites like Roadside America traffic in the oddities of Americana, from Mystery Spots and Muffler Men to Civil War dinosaur parks. Atlas Obscura covers the same terrain, but on an international scale. There's something almost perverse about intentionally choosing Truth or Consequences, New Mexico over Bermuda for a vacation, but there are other reasons to travel besides sunshine and cocktails.

Essentially, a majority of tourism is exploration. The common variety involves seeing more of the world, experiencing it, and learning some history while away from work. In the past, that appeal to explore and unwind almost always led vacationers to beach-side resorts, natural wonders, and museums of art and history. These were once adventurous destinations in a time before commercial aviation and affordable travel.

That idea of traveling to a far-off location, sightseeing, and returning with a souvenir is now in direct competition with home entertainment systems and 3-D video games. For those still interested in widening their horizons despite the burden and cost of international travel, few frontiers are left. The mysteries of the world are well-known and easily Googleable. Locales that, 50 years ago, were considered exotic are now relatively tame. There are regular flights to Easter Island and Antarctica. McDonald's now has franchises in Africa. Machu Picchu and the Galapagos Islands are overrun with ecotourists. Mount Everest is strewn with the garbage from the thousands of hikers that pass through its peaks every year. Without the draw of something new and untouched, these locations become just another place to go and take pictures.

What we end up with instead is something artificial that says a lot more about who we are as a culture—Las Vegas, for example. The city built by mobsters in the middle of the Nevada desert is a paradoxical monument to our hubris and a reflection of our baser instincts. It's a testament to the addictive power of gambling. No longer content to define their own Western American interpretation of utopia, newer Vegas casinos have been mimicking international cities such as Paris, Venice, and New York City. In the process, Las Vegas is transforming into an oversized Potemkin village that exists as an imitation of other cities. At some point someone will build a Las Vegas-themed casino, completing the circle of absurdity.

Simultaneously experiencing and interpreting Las Vegas in this way is, in a sense, postmodern tourism. Or one manifestation of it, since postmodernism doesn't really have a fixed definition. Postmodern tourism is one part viewing the world through the lens of symbol and illusion, one part personal interest, and one part ironic detachment. It might mean visiting Roswell, New Mexico, not for the history of alien visitation, but for the spectacle of American alien fascination.

Vacationing as something more than self-indulgence is nothing new. Philosophers have been writing about the topic for the last 100 years. Baudelaire wrote about the peripatetic flâneurs who loitered and meandered in French streets, examining everything as an attraction. Walter Benjamin, one of the fathers of postmodernism, observed the abandoned arcades of Paris, a forerunner to the malls of today. Jean Baudrillard created the archetype of postmodern tourism in his book America , where he traveled throughout the U.S., commenting on all the absurdity he encountered. But perhaps most illustrative of a region's potential to draw both visitors and interpreters of visitors is Michael Pretes's study of a Santa Claus theme park in the Lapland area of Northern Finland.

Lapland is an area of immense beauty and home to the unique Sami culture, but attracting visitors to an area that gets below negative 40 degrees C in the winter is tough. It was only after the local government built a Santa Claus theme park that tourists began to show up.

In his study, Pretes understood Lapland's need for tourism. It was essential to the region's economy, but he didn't understand why people would be drawn to a cartoonish amusement park. He assumed most people would want to experience something authentic while on vacation, to see nature and how other people live, not contrived nostalgia. But he also wondered if the intentional spectacle of the Santa Claus theme park might be an improvement over "the seemingly authentic realm [of tourism] in which the tourist is permitted to wander, but is nevertheless still removed from the real culture."

More and more academics like Pretes pondered on the meaning of postmodernism and tourism in various journals, but it never caught on as a pastime outside of academia. That is until recently.

As we speak, Detroit is actively battling to stop the flow of ruin tourism. The city's post-industrial decay has already been the subject of numerous coffee table books, documentaries, and essays. Proposals to preserve the city's decay as a metaphor for "America as modern Rome" and the decline of capitalism have been met with resistance. The city wants to re-brand itself as a phoenix rising out of the ashes, with art communes and urban gardens, not as an abandoned ghost town.

Yet visitors still want to explore how the industrial center of American progress and ingenuity could have fallen so far. Detroit photo books, with images of dilapidated Art Deco theaters, ivy-strewn houses stripped of their copper wiring, and abandoned auto plants covered in graffiti, make for dramatic visuals, but they don't give a complete picture of what it is like to live in the city. They say nothing about the people, their culture, or their living history - those nebulous concepts that are hard to pin down and recreate in a museum where life is frozen in time. For that, you would need to visit Detroit firsthand.

As educational as it might be, few people will choose Detroit as a holiday destination. No classroom will be chartering a bus into a land of disrepair even though that experience would be more relevant to a student's day-to-day existence than a visit to a Civil War site. There are now tours available of West Baltimore neighborhoods featured in episodes of The Wire that would better explain the complexities of society than any textbook could, but getting permission slips signed might be tough.

Still, it's a chance to see a perspective of the world that most people are unlikely to see or ever know about. Visiting these locations and thinking about the world in this way alters casual tourism into active participation. The sightseer is no longer a passive observer expecting to be entertained by natives, but someone engaging with the world around him.

Paradoxes of Postmodern Tourists and Innovation in Tourism Marketing

  • First Online: 23 August 2018

Cite this chapter

postmodernism in tourism

  • Enrique Bigné 3 &
  • Alain Decrop 4  

3138 Accesses

15 Citations

Innovation challenges tourism experiences in a new digitalized era. The new scenario is showing some paradoxical changes that lead to new approaches for tourism production, distribution, and financing. This chapter focuses on innovation in marketing, involving market processes, new changes in tourist behavior and new approaches adopted by companies to face new trends. An emphasis is given to service innovation in tourism, with a special focus on companies, tourist destinations, and the digital environment. Likewise, the chapter examines a series of paradoxes of postmodern tourists and how companies develop new products and services to try to address them.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this chapter

  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
  • Available as EPUB and PDF
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info
  • Durable hardcover edition

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Purchases are for personal use only

Institutional subscriptions

Aubert, N. (2005). L’individu hypermoderne . Ramonville: Erès.

Google Scholar  

Bachimon, P., & Dérioz, P. (2010). Tourisme affinitaire: Entre revitalisation et dénaturation des territoires. Téoros: Revue de recherche en tourisme, 29 (1), 8–16.

Article   Google Scholar  

Bastiaansen, M., Straatman, S., Driessen, E., Mitas, O., Stekelenburg, J., & Wang, L. (2018). My destination in your brain: A novel neuromarketing approach for evaluating the effectiveness of destination marketing. Journal of Destination Marketing & Management, 7 , 76–88.

Baudrillard, J. (1968). Le système des objets . Paris: Gallimard.

Baudrillard, J. (1970). La société de consommation . Paris: Gallimard.

Belk, R. W. (1988). Possessions and the extended self. Journal of Consumer Research, 15 , 139–168.

Bigné, E. (2011). The transformation of distribution channels. In L. Moutinho (Ed.), Strategic management in tourism (2nd ed., pp. 141–157). Wallingford: Cabi.

Chapter   Google Scholar  

Bigné, E. (2015). Fronteras de la investigación en marketing. Hacia la unión disiciplinaria . Valencia: Publicacions de la Universitat de València.

Bigné, E. (2016a). Neuroturismo: transpórtate a la nueva investigación en turismo. In D. Lopez-Olivares (Ed.), Turismo y Movilidad: Interrelaciones y Nuevas Oportunidades (pp. 15–30). Valencia: Tirant Lo Blanc.

Bigné, E. (2016b). Frontiers in research in business: Will you be in? European Journal of Management and Business Economics, 25 (3), 89–90.

Boorstin, D. J. (1964). The image: A guide to pseudo-events in America . New York: Harper.

Brown, S., Kozinets, R., & Sherry, J. (2003). Teaching old brands new tricks: Retro branding and the revival of brand meaning. Journal of Marketing: July 2003, 67 (3), 19–33.

Buhalis, D., & Law, R. (2008). Progress in information technology and tourism management: 20 years on and 10 years after the internet—The state of eTourism research. Tourism Management, 29 (4), 609–623.

Chung, T. S., Rust, R. T., & Wedel, M. (2009). My mobile music: An adaptive personalization system for digital audio players. Marketing Science, 28 (1), 52–68.

Chung, T. S., Wedel, M., & Rust, R. T. (2016). Adaptive personalization using social networks. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 44 (1), 66–87.

Claveria, O., Monte, E., & Torra, S. (2017). Regional tourism demand forecasting with machine learning models: Gaussian process regression vs. neural network models in a multiple-input multiple-output setting (pp. 1–26) (Working paper 2017/01). Accessed from http://www.ub.edu/irea/working_papers/2017/201701.pdf

Davenport, T. H. (1993). Process innovation: Reengineering work through information technology . Boston, MA: Harvard Business Press.

Dellarocas, C., Katona, Z., & Rand, W. (2013). Media, aggregators, and the link economy: Strategic hyperlink formation in content networks. Management Science, 59 (10), 2360–2379.

Feifer, M. (1985). Going places . London: Macmillan.

Firat, A. F., & Venkatesh, A. (1993). Postmodernity: The age of marketing. International Journal of Research in Marketing, 10 (3), 227–249.

Firat, A. F., & Venkatesh, A. (1995). Liberatory postmodernism and the reenchantment of consumption. Journal of Consumer Research, 22 (3), 239–267.

Gandomi, A., & Haider, M. (2015). Beyond the hype: Big data concepts, methods, and analytics. International Journal of Information Management, 35 (2), 137–144.

Grönroos, C. (1990). Service management and marketing . Lexington, MA: Lexington Books.

Guttentag, D. A. (2010). Virtual reality: Applications and implications for tourism. Tourism Management, 31 (5), 637–651.

Hauser, J. R., Liberali, G., & Urban, G. L. (2014). Website morphing 2.0: Switching costs, partial exposure, random exit, and when to morph. Management Science, 60 (6), 1594–1616.

Hetzel, P. (2002). Planète Conso: Marketing expérientiel et nouveaux univers de consommation . Paris: Edition d’Organisation.

Hjalager, A. M. (2010). A review of innovation research in tourism. Tourism Management, 31 (1), 1–12.

Holbrook, M. B., & Hirschman, E. C. (1982). The experiential aspects of consumption: Consumer fantasies, feelings and fun. Journal of Consumer Research, 9 , 132–140.

Huotari, K., & Hamari, J. (2012, October). Defining gamification: A service marketing perspective. In Proceeding of the 16th International Academic MindTrek Conference (pp. 17–22). New York: ACM.

Jin, L., He, Y., & Song, H. (2012). Service customization: To upgrade or to downgrade? An investigation of how option framing affects tourists’ choice of package-tour services. Tourism Management, 33 (2), 266–275.

Kracht, J., & Wang, Y. (2010). Examining the tourism distribution channel: Evolution and transformation. International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, 22 (5), 736–757.

Law, R. (2000). Back-propagation learning in improving the accuracy of neural network-based tourism demand forecasting. Tourism Management, 21 (4), 331–340.

Lipovetsky, G. (2004). Les temps hypermodernes . Paris: Grasset.

Lyotard, J.-F. (1979). La condition postmoderne . Paris: Editions de Minuit.

Maffesoli, M. (1988). Le temps des tribus . Paris: Méridien Klincksieck.

Maffesoli, M. (2006). Du nomadisme: Vagabondages initiatiques . Paris: Editions de La Table Ronde.

Neslin, S. A., Grewal, D., Leghorn, R., Shankar, V., Teerling, M. L., Thomas, J. S., & Verhoef, P. C. (2006). Challenges and opportunities in multichannel customer management. Journal of Service Research, 9 (2), 95–112.

Nunkoo, R., Ramkissoon, H., & Gursoy, D. (2013). Use of structural equation modeling in tourism research: Past, present, and future. Journal of Travel Research, 52 (6), 759–771.

Pattie, D. C., & Snyder, J. (1996). Using a neural network to forecast visitor behavior. Annals of Tourism Research, 23 (1), 151–164.

Pearce, D. G., & Schott, C. (2005). Tourism distribution channels: The visitors’ perspective. Journal of Travel Research, 44 (1), 50–63.

Rosenbloom, B. (2007). The wholesaler’s role in the marketing channel: Disintermediation vs. reintermediation. International Review of Retail, Distribution and Consumer Research, 17 (4), 327–339.

Rust, R. T., & Huang, M. H. (2014). The service revolution and the transformation of marketing science. Marketing Science, 33 (2), 206–221.

Rust, R. T., Moorman, C., & Dickson, P. R. (2002). Getting return on quality: Revenue expansion, cost reduction, or both? Journal of Marketing, 66 (4), 7–24.

Sansaloni, R. (2006). Le non-consommateur. Comment le consommateur reprend le pouvoir . Paris: Dunod.

Sharpley, R. (2014). Postmodernism, tourism. In J. Jafari & H. Xiao (Eds.), Encyclopedia of tourism . Cham: Springer.

Song, H., & Li, G. (2008). Tourism demand modelling and forecasting—A review of recent research. Tourism Management, 29 (2), 203–220.

Urry, J. (1990). The tourist gaze: Leisure and travel in contemporaries societies (2nd. ed.). London: Sage.

Verhoef, P. C., Kannan, P. K., & Inman, J. J. (2015). From multi-channel retailing to omni-channel retailing: Introduction to the special issue on multi-channel retailing. Journal of Retailing, 91 (2), 174–181.

Vu, H. Q., Li, G., Law, R., & Ye, B. H. (2015). Exploring the travel behaviors of inbound tourists to Hong Kong using geotagged photos. Tourism Management, 46 , 222–232.

Wang, Y., & Fesenmaier, D. (2004). Towards understanding members’ general participation in and active contribution to an online travel community. Tourism Management, 25 , 709–722.

Wedel, M., & Kannan, P. K. (2016). Marketing analytics for data-rich environments. Journal of Marketing, 80 (6), 97–121.

Wu, D. C., Song, H., & Shen, S. (2017). New developments in tourism and hotel demand modeling and forecasting. International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, 29 (1), 507–529.

Zahavi, D. (2003). Husserl’s phenomenology . Stanford: Stanford University Press.

Download references

Author information

Authors and affiliations.

University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain

Enrique Bigné

University of Namur, Namur, Belgium

Alain Decrop

You can also search for this author in PubMed   Google Scholar

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Enrique Bigné .

Editor information

Editors and affiliations.

Ulysses Foundation, Madrid, Spain

Eduardo Fayos-Solà

School of Events, Tourism and Hospitality Management, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, UK

Chris Cooper

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

Copyright information

© 2019 Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature

About this chapter

Bigné, E., Decrop, A. (2019). Paradoxes of Postmodern Tourists and Innovation in Tourism Marketing. In: Fayos-Solà, E., Cooper, C. (eds) The Future of Tourism. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89941-1_7

Download citation

DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89941-1_7

Published : 23 August 2018

Publisher Name : Springer, Cham

Print ISBN : 978-3-319-89940-4

Online ISBN : 978-3-319-89941-1

eBook Packages : Business and Management Business and Management (R0)

Share this chapter

Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:

Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.

Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative

  • Publish with us

Policies and ethics

  • Find a journal
  • Track your research

IMAGES

  1. Chicago's Overlooked Postmodern Architecture

    postmodernism in tourism

  2. 'Postmodern Design Complete' Celebrates the 20th Century's Most

    postmodernism in tourism

  3. Postmodernism Explained

    postmodernism in tourism

  4. Figure 1 from New trends in tourism? From globalization to

    postmodernism in tourism

  5. Postmodern Theory of Culture and Cultural Tourism

    postmodernism in tourism

  6. Postmodern Art

    postmodernism in tourism

VIDEO

  1. Mapping Postmodernism

  2. MODERNISM, POSTMODERNISM AND ITS IMPACT ON OUR PRACTICE

  3. Postmodernism: Last Stand of Skepticism

  4. Postmodernism:Individualism, Metanarrative & Extremism

  5. Postmodernism

  6. EPISODE 2: Postmodernism, Contemporary Popular Culture, and Recent Theoretical Developments (Part 1)

COMMENTS

  1. Postmodernism, tourism

    Tourism and Postmodernism. According to Urry, tourism is "prefiguratively postmodern" ( 1990: 87), where earlier forms of mass tourism, such as the seaside resorts of the nineteenth century, combined image, spectacle, art, and culture into the reality of the popular mass tourist experience. However, the development of contemporary tourism ...

  2. The impact of pluralistic values on postmodern tourists' behavioural

    1. Introduction. Postmodernism originated between 1960 and 1970 and is characterised by human nature, culture, and pluralistic values (Wang, Niu, Lu, & Qian, 2015).Unlike modern societies, the postmodern world is often unstructured (Lenartowicz, Isidori, & Maussier, 2016).From the perspective of postmodern tourism, postmodernism emphasises the "truth" and "nature" of the tourism ...

  3. Post-tourism in the usual environment: From the perspective of unusual

    Although tourism research has tended to conceive tourism in terms of time and space (Govers, Van Hecke, & Cabus, 2008), studies on postmodernism and post-tourism have broadened the academic discussion to include tourism practices and the role played by the environment to influence the dynamics of the tourism experience. Consequently, the widely ...

  4. Postmodern Tourism and Post-Tourist Behaviors

    The change created by postmodernism in tourism practices has been further advanced by Feifer's. (1985) use of the concept of post-tourist. Although the con cept of post-tourist has been used in ...

  5. PDF Postmodernism, tourism

    Tourism and Postmodernism According to Urry, tourism is "prefiguratively postmodern" (1990: 87), where earlier forms of mass tourism, such as the seaside resorts of the nineteenth century, combined image, spectacle, art, and culture into the reality of the popular mass tourist experience. However, the develop-

  6. Contextualizing Authenticity in Tourism: An Examination of Postmodern

    The Postmodern Tourist. In order to sufficiently explore authenticity and its many related terms, it is first necessary to examine the modern and postmodern tourist. When, in the 1970s tourism studies emerged as an academic field, many key researchers and theorists regarded it as a phenomenon resultant of modernism, and used modernist discourse ...

  7. Tourism, the tourist experience and postmodernity

    This chapter introduces the concept of postmodernity as it relates to the tourism industry, and to tourism research. The aim is to offer students and academics interested in postmodern thinking for research and other purposes a synthesis of key themes and debates. Postmodern thinking can help us to critique tourism as a social and cultural ...

  8. Tourism After the Postmodern Turn

    Tourism, we argue, has become an important analytical tool for rethinking social theory after the postmodern turn. The chapter briefly examines the so-called "critical turn" in tourism studies, the growing utility of actor network theory, postcolonial approaches to tourism, the rise of "mobility studies," the turn toward new material ...

  9. Theories of modern and postmodern tourism

    This aspect of postmodern theory reflects the notion of the postmodernist logic as non-dualistic and anti-hierarchial (Lather 1991). Similarly, postmodernist systems of knowledge are less authoritative, less conclusive, and more pluralized than modernist systems of knowledge (Bauman 1987). The study of tourism emerged as a distinguished ...

  10. Postmodern Tourism and Post-Tourist Behaviors

    Postmodern Tourism and The Concept of Post-Tourist Although postmodernism began to be effective in the social sphere since the 1960s, the 1980s were the period when postmodernism was booming (Callinicos, 2001, p.13). In addition, this period was the period when postmodernism started to affect the tourism area.

  11. The `Other' Postmodern Tourism: Culture, Travel and the New Middle

    I concentrate on Third World destinations where the struggle for class legitimation is particularly sharp; John Urry focuses ostensibly on tourism in the advanced capitalist economies. Analysis of fifty-seven tourist brochures (the majority of which are for 1991/1992) has been undertaken for this purpose.

  12. Post-tourism in the usual environment: From the perspective of unusual

    Although tourism research has tended to conceive tourism in terms of time and space (Govers, Van Hecke, & Cabus, 2008), studies on postmodernism and post-tourism have broadened the academic discussion to include tourism practices and the role played by the environment to influence the dynamics of the tourism experience.

  13. [PDF] Postmodern Society and Tourism

    Postmodern Society and Tourism. Mauro Dujmović, Aljošša Vitasović. Published 27 April 2015. Sociology. Tourism in South East Europe 2011 (Archive) Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to indicate that in today's circumstances of time and space compression, diversification of the tourism product, diversity and multiplicity of tourist ...

  14. Postmodernism

    Tourism place has become dedifferentiated both geographically and culturally, some destinations typifying the collage, or the borrowing and combining of cultural forms and practices, fundamental to the concept of postmodernism. Geographically, tourism now occurs in places normally associated with non-tourism activities, such as (post)industrial ...

  15. Debate on tourism in postmodernism and beyond

    Abstract and Figures. The nexus between globalization and tourism has been established whereas postmodernism imprints features on the current and future society. Seen as a result of revolutions ...

  16. Paradoxes of Postmodern Tourists and Innovation in Tourism Marketing

    The postmodern tourist as presented in the previous section elicits a paradigm shift for research in tourism. Similarly, managers and policy makers are facing this evolving scenario, characterised by new technologies and social changes. In an attempt to satisfy the tourist's needs, ...

  17. Tourism, Modernity, and Postmodernity

    Tourism, Modernity, and Postmodernity. Tim Oakes, Search for more papers by this author. Claudio Minca, Search for more papers by this author. ... The Tourist as Post/modern Subject. Conclusion. Citing Literature. A Companion to Tourism. Related; Information; Close Figure Viewer. Return to Figure. Previous Figure Next Figure.

  18. The impact of pluralistic values on postmodern tourists' behavioural

    Postmodern tourism can lead to the sustainable economic development of certain attractions becoming postmodern attractions (Crespi-Vallbona & Mascarilla-Miró, 2021). Understanding the pluralistic values pursued by postmodern tourists can help promote the development of postmodern tourism. Therefore, it is worth investigating the pluralistic ...

  19. Welcome to Fabulous Roswell: The Rise of Postmodern Tourism

    Postmodern tourism is one part viewing the world through the lens of symbol and illusion, one part personal interest, and one part ironic detachment. It might mean visiting Roswell, New Mexico ...

  20. (PDF) Postmodern Transformations of Tourism Development

    The factors influencing the postmodern tourism consumerism include the awareness of the social crisis, escape from reality, mundane avoidance, search for the self and self-realization, overcoming ...

  21. PDF Paradoxes of Postmodern Tourists and Innovation in Tourism Marketing

    with non-tourism activities (e.g., industrial cities, shopping malls)"; (3) (new) post-modern attractions blur the distinction between reality and image and between real and virtual. With the emergence of the "post-tourist", Feifer (1985) challenges the notion of postmodernity as the post-tourist "is cognizant of the frivolity of contem-

  22. PDF Postmodern Transformations of Tourism Development

    The postmodern tourism defines the attractiveness of natural and rural areas as postmodernist expressions. The first direction is quite successfully implemented in the modern concept of tourism development and has every chance to widely reach a mass consumer. The development of the second

  23. Theories of modern and postmodern tourism

    The main purpose of this study is to examine the structural relationships of authenticities in the cultural heritage tourism context. This paper deconstructs authenticity into objective, constructive, existential, and postmodern types, and proposes a relationship model for them. The results suggest that objective authenticity positively affects ...