The Impact of Tourism in East Africa
A Ruinous System
Download Url(s)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/jj.1231860Author(s)
Storch, Anne
Mietzner, Angelika
Language
EnglishAbstract
This book explores the relationship between imperial formations and individual encounters at African tourist sites – spaces of leisure, healing and work. It examines how encounters between tourists and hosts tend to be constructed along colonial thought lines and considers how players in the hospitality industry do not interact as coeval participants, but are racialised, scripted and positioned according to colonially-established order. The authors focus on the language of these encounters, not only speech, performance and response, but also silence, resonance, emptiness, noise – objectified, materialised, evasive and confusing. Through its exploration of language in these encounters, the volume shows that ruination is the one feature that is omnipresent in the multiple and diverse tourist settings of the postcolonial world. This book is open access under a CC BY ND licence.
Keywords
Business; Linguistics; Political ScienceISBN
9781845418380, 9781845418366Publication date and place
2021Series
Tourism and Cultural Change,Classification
Hospitality, sports, leisure and tourism industries
Sociolinguistics
Colonialism and imperialism