1st Edition
Japanese Tourism and Travel Culture
Introduction: The Culture of Travel (tabi no bunka) and Japanese Tourism Sylvie Guichard-Anguis Part 1: Travelling History in the Present 1. The Past and the Other in the Present: Kokunai Kokusaika Kanko– Domestic International Tourism Nelson Graburn 2. The Heroic Edo-ic: Travelling the History Highway in Today’s Tokugawa Japan Millie Creighton 3. Japanese Inns (Ryokan) as Producers of Japanese Identity Sylvie Guichard-Anguis Part 2: Travel in Tradition, Time and Fantasy 4. Meanings of Tradition in Contemporary Japanese Domestic Tourism Markus Oedewald 5. Fantasy Travel in Time and Space: A New Japanese Phenomenon? Joy Hendry Part 3: Travelling the Familiar Overseas 6. Japanese Tourists in Korea: Colonial and Postcolonial Encounters Okpyo Moon 7. The Japanese Encounter with the South: Japanese Tourists in Palau Shinji Yamashita 8. The Search For The Real Thing – Japanese Tourism to Britain Bronwen Surman 9. All Roads Lead to Home: Japanese Culinary Tourism in Italy Merry I. White
Biography
Sylvie Guichard-Anguis is a researcher at the French National Centre of Scientific Research (CNRS) and works as a member of the research group "Spaces, Nature and Culture" in the Department of Geography, Paris-Sorbonne Paris 4. She is co-editor of Globalizing Japan (Routledge, 2001), Crossed Gazes at International Cultural Heritage (in French and English, 2003) with the collaboration of UNESCO, and co-author of Grand Hotels in Asia, Modernity, Urban Dynamic and Sociability (in French 2003, Korean translation 2007).
Okpyo Moon is Professor of Anthropology at the Academy of Korean Studies, Korea. Her major publications include From Paddy Field to Ski Slope: Revitalisation of Tradition in Japanese Village Life (In English, 1989); Consumption and Leisure Life in Contemporary Korea (In Korean, 1997); New Women: Images of Modern Women in Japan and Korea (In Korean, 2003) and Understanding Japanese Culture through Travel and Tourism (In Korean, 2006).
'Japanese Tourism and Travel Culture presents a fascinating]...[exploration of Japanese tourism culture. Though clearly geared toward researchers, the articles are on the whole relatively brief, and many could usefully be used as readings in undergraduate courses covering comparative tourism cultures' - Lonny E. Carlile, Annals of Tourism Research 37 (2010)






