This book explores the relationship between tourism and the moving image, from the early era of silent moving pictures through to cinema as mass entertainment. It examines how our active and emotional engagement with moving images provides meaning and connection to a place that can affect our decision-making when we travel. It also analyses how our touristic experiences can inform our film-viewing. A range of genres and themes are studied including the significance of the western, espionage, road and gangster movies, along with further study of film studio theme parks and an introduction to the relationship between gaming and travel. This book will appeal to tourism scholars as well as film studies professionals, and is written in an accessible manner for a general audience.
Table des matières
Foreword
Introduction
Chapter One: Mise en Scene
SECTION ONE: FROM STATIC TO MOVING IMAGES
Chapter Two: From Panoramas to Phantom Rides
Chapter Three: The Emotions of Motion 1: Travel War and Unrest in the Era of the Moving Image
Chapter Four: The Emotions of Motion 2: War, Propaganda, National Cinema and Travel
Chapter Five: Travel in the Era of Modern Warfare and Moving Images
SECTION TWO: TRAVELLING IN, ON AND THROUGH THE LANDSCAPE – VOYEUR OR FLÂNEUR?
Chapter Six: Badlands and Beauty: Landscape, Travel and Place in the Western
Chapter Seven: Simply a Story? The Cultural Pervasiveness of the Western
Chapter Eight: Travel and Transformation: Road Movies and Touristic Journeys
Chapter Nine: Baddies in the Old and New Worlds: Bushrangers, Gangsters and Crime on Screen
SECTION THREE: IMAGINING PLACES: ILLUSIONS AND DREAMS
Chapter Ten: Creating Place
Chapter Eleven: Spaces and Places: Travelling for/to the Moving Image
CONCLUSION
Chapter Twelve: Manifestations of Tourism through Film and Television: Making (some) Meaning from Moving Images and Moving People
A propos de l’auteur
Sue Beeton is a travel and tourism researcher and writer and Foundation Chair of the College of Eminent Professors at William Angliss Institute in Australia. For over a quarter of a century, she has conducted tourism-based research into community development, film-induced tourism and pop culture and nature-based tourism. As well as producing numerous academic papers, book chapters and reports, Prof Beeton has published a range of research-based books, including Ecotourism: a practical guide for rural communities, Community Development Through Tourism and Tourism and the Moving Image, as well as two editions of the acclaimed monograph, Film-Induced Tourism.