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E-raamat: Understanding Tourism Mobilities in Japan

Edited by (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Antinomies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Oct-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429759901
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Antinomies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Oct-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429759901

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The total number of foreign tourists received in countries throughout the world was 530 million in 1995. That number broke through the 1 billion mark for the first time in 2012, at 1,035,000,000. In 2015, it reached 1,180,000,000. According to Anthony Elliott and John Urry, modern society has been characterized as being "mobile," and within that we are also living "mobile lives."

In modern society, flows of people, things, capital, information, ideas and technologies are constantly being occurred, and as they are merging like a violently rushing stream, what could be termed a landscape of mobilities has appeared. Social realities are in flux and are changing into shapes that are different than those that existed before now. This volume will expand the inquiry of tourism mobilities comprehensively and clearly from the fields of humanities and social sciences. In particular, tourism mobilities has been actively investigated up to now in the UK, US, Europe and Australia, but even though the Japanese body of literature contains a great many excellent studies of Japanese examples, there are almost no English-language articles presenting their results.

Publishing examples of Japanese tourism mobilities will not only foster new and exciting lines of inquiry for the existing and future research on tourism mobilities, but also have implications for humanities and social sciences throughout the world.

Introduction: The Significance of Research on Tourism Mobilities and
Related Issues
1. Seeking Sensuous Mobilities: Tourist Quests for Familiarity
and Alterity
2. Tourism, Nowstalgia and the (Non)experience of Place
3. New
Tourism and Social Transformation in Postmodernity: Sociological Examination
of Japanese New Tourism
4. Late Tourism and 'Boomerang' Mobility in Japan
5.
Mobility Turn in Rural Districts in Japan: From "Kanko(-) (tourism)" to
"Kankei (relationships)"
6. The New Mobile Assemblages Created by Pokémon GO
7. The Roots and Routes of Matryoshka: Souvenirs and Tourist Mobility in
Russia, Japan, and the World
8. "Transference of Traditions" in Tourism:
Local Identities as Images Reflected in Infinity Mirrors
9. Marathon
Mobilities: A Western Tourist Perspective on Japanese Marathons
10.
Performative Nationalism in Japans Inbound Tourism Television Programmes:
YOU, Sekai! (The World), and the Tourism Nation
11. Shibuya Crossing as A
Non-Tourist Site: Performative Participation and Re-Staging
12. Mobilising
Pilgrim Bodily Space: The Contest Between Authentic and Folk Pilgrimage in
the Interwar Period
13. Digital Media as "Social Spaces" of Tourism: The
Japanese Cases of Travelling Material Things
Hideki Endo is a Professor in Tourism Research in the Faculty of Letters and Executive Director of the Institute of Humanities, Human and Social Sciences at Ritsumeikan University, Japan. He has studied the sociology of tourism, especially the social transformation that mobility and tourism bring. Among his publications are Tourism Mobilities (2017), Media and Culture (2017), Space and Media (2015), Tourism and Media (2014), Contemporary Cultural Studies (2011) and Actualities in Sociology of Tourism (2010).