This special issue of Ethnologia Europaea focuses on tour guides as cultural mediators. It opens with a discussion of tour guiding in the anthropology of tourism by Jackie Feldman and Jonathan Skinner and consideration of how tour guiding should be seen as imaginative and performative practice. This is illustrated by a highly international and comparative collection by leading anthropologists and ethnologists, many of whom have guiding experience themselves: Valerio Simoni on intimacy, informality and sexuality in guiding relations in Cuba; David Picard on modern guiding and traditional values in La Réunion; Jackie Feldman on Jewish-Israelis guiding Christian pilgrims in the Holy Land; Amos Ron and Yotam Lurie on the intimacy and trust in guide -- tourist relations in Israel; Annelou Ypeij, Eva Krah and Floor van der Hout on the impact of gender on guide -- local relations in Peru; Irit Dekel on the manipulation of the past and the present in home museums in Germany; Jonathan Skinner on the imagination and props involved in the re-animation of heritage in a historical fantasy home in the UK. The issue ends with discussion commentaries from Noel Salazar and Erik Cohen that reiterate tour guiding as a particularly temporal and physical mediating pursuit, one which raises critical questions as to the future mechanics of tour guiding and how a performative approach to guiding engages with authenticity and new technologies.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9788763546478
Publisert
2018-12-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Museum Tusculanum Press
Vekt
250 gr
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
120

Om bidragsyterne

Jackie Feldman is professor of anthropology at Ben Gurion University of the Negev in Israel, head of the Rabb Center for Holocaust Studies, and visiting lecturer at the University of Tübingen. His research areas are pilgrimage and tourism, collective memory, museum studies and Holocaust commemoration. His most recent book is A Jewish Guide in the Holy Land: How Christian Pilgrims Made Me Israeli (Bloomington University of Indiana Press, 2016). Jonathan Skinner is reader in social anthropology at the University of Roehampton. His interests are in the anthropology of leisure: specifically tourism regeneration and tour guiding, contested heritage and dark tourism, and social dancing and wellbeing. He has worked in the Caribbean, the USA and the UK. His most recent publication is Leisure and Death: Lively Encounters with Risk, Death, and Dying co-edited with Adam Kaul (University of Colorado Press, 2018).