🎉   Please check out our new website over at books-etc.com.

Seller
Your price
£19.95
RRP: £29.95
Save £10.00 (33%)
Dispatched within 2-3 working days.

Language and Tourism in Postcolonial Settings

Tourism and Cultural Change

Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Channel View Publications Ltd, Bristol, United Kingdom
Imprint: Channel View Publications
Published: 13th May 2019
Dimensions: w 156mm h 234mm d 10mm
Weight: 305g
ISBN-10: 1845416775
ISBN-13: 9781845416775
Barcode No: 9781845416775
Trade or Institutional customer? Contact us about large order quotes.
Synopsis
This book focuses on perspectives from and on the global south, providing fresh data and analyses on languages in African, Caribbean, Middle-Eastern and Asian tourism contexts. It provides a critical perspective on tourism in postcolonial and neocolonial settings, explored through in-depth case studies. The volume offers a multifaceted view on how language commodifies, and is commodified in, tourism settings and considers language practices and discourse as a way of constructing identities, boundaries and places. It also reflects on academic practice and economic dynamics in a field that is characterised by social inequalities and injustice, and tourism as the world's largest industry enacting dynamic communicative, social and cultural transformations. The book will appeal to both undergraduate and postgraduate students of tourism studies, linguistics, literature, cultural history and anthropology, as well as researchers and professionals in these fields.

New & Used

Seller Information Condition Price
-New£19.95
+ FREE UK P & P

What Reviewers Are Saying

Submit your review
Newspapers & Magazines
This stimulating collection of chapters offers critically-informed and semiotically-rich ethnographies of the making of the post-colonized-host and the post-colonizer-tourist-guest by unveiling the multilayered ideologies that shape their fleeting encounters. It is a superb contribution not only to the scholarship on Language and Tourism but also to a politically engaged sociolinguistics, which embraces a much-needed decolonial perspective. * Cecile B. Vigouroux, Simon Fraser University, Canada * Linguists meet tourists meet the exotic: studying language in less likely places can leave you baffled and bedazzled. This book shows the richness of the semiotic space created in tourist encounters, never mind how little language is actually used. All contributions are to be commended for including the observant language researcher in the analysis. The volume is equally relevant for linguists, anthropologists and researchers of tourism. * Axel Fleisch, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany * An eclectic grouping of case studies - at once informative and thought-provoking - looking into the meaning and complexity of language in tourism settings. An 'upside down' look, if you will, at how language is shaped and shapes those engaged in the tourism experience: host, guest, and industry - past and present. * Kelly Whitney-Gould, Vancouver Island University, Canada *