1st Edition
Authenticity in North America Place, Tourism, Heritage, Culture and the Popular Imagination
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This interdisciplinary book addresses the highly relevant debates about authenticity in North America, providing a contemporary re-examination of American culture, tourism and commodification of place.
Blending social sciences and humanities research skills, it formulates an examination of the geography of authenticity in North America, and brings together studies of both rurality and urbanity across the country, exposing the many commonalities of these different landscapes. Relph stated that nostalgic places are inauthentic, yet within this work several chapters explore how festivals and visitor attractions, which cultivate place heritage appeal, are authenticated by tourists and communities, creating a shared sense of belonging. In a world of hyperreal simulacra, post-truth and fake news, this book bucks the trend by demonstrating that authenticity can be found everywhere: in a mouthful of food, in a few bars of a Beach Boys song, in a statue of a troll, in a diffuse magical atmosphere, in the weirdness of the ungentrified streets.
Written by a range of leading experts, this book offers a contemporary view of American authenticity, tourism, identity and culture. It will be of great interest to upper-level students, researchers and academics in Tourism, Geography, History, Cultural Studies, American Studies and Film Studies.
Introduction Hyper-Authenticity
Jane Lovell and Sam Hitchmough
Chapter One The Kept Weird: US American Weird Fiction and cities
MC McGrady
Chapter Two Something Like a Circus or a Sewer’: The Thrill and Threat of New York City in American Culture
Keith McDonald and Wayne Johnson
Chapter Three "That Chinese guy is where you go if you want egg foo yung": Construction and Subversion of Exotic Culinary Authenticity in David Wong Louie’s The Barbarians are Coming
Jiachen Zhang
Chapter Four Good Authentic Vibrations: The Beach Boys, California, and Pet Sounds
Christopher Kirkby
Chapter Five A Western Skyline I swear I can see: affective critical rurality expressed through contemporary Americana music.
Keith Halfacree
Chapter Six ‘We Sure Didn’t Know’: Laura Gilpin, Mary Ann Nakai, and Cold War Politics on the Navajo Nation
Louise Siddons
Chapter Seven Opening the Memory Boxes: Magical Hypereality, Authenticity and the Haida People
Jane Lovell
Chapter Eight The Authenticity Paradox and the Western
Ken Fox
Chapter Nine Playing at Westworld - Gunfighters and Saloon Girls at the Tombstone Helldorado Festival
Warwick Frost and Jennifer Laing
Chapter Ten Hidden in the Mountains: Celebrating Swedish Heritage in Rural Pennsylvania
Katherine Burlingame
Chapter Eleven The Triumph of Trolls: The Making, Re-making and Commercialization of Heritage Identity
Ann Smart Martin. Cortney Anderson-Kramer, and Jared L. Schmidt
Chapter Twelve ‘It is yet too soon to Write the History of the Revolution’: Fashioning the Memory of Thomas Paine
Krysten E. Blackstone
Chapter Thirteen Familiarity breeds content: shaping the nostalgic drift in postbellum plantation life-writing
David Anderson
Chapter Fourteen Only Going One Way? Due South’s Role in Sustaining Canadian Television Linda Knowles
Biography
Dr Jane Lovell worked at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden and at Canterbury City Council, where she staged events including sculpture and international light shows. At Canterbury Christ Church University, Jane specialises in teaches Heritage and Creative Industry management and Creative Places. A cultural geographer, visiting fellow at the British Library and Associate Fellow at the UCL Institute of the Americas, she explores tourism, authenticity and places, magical spaces, film locations and researches the light installations that she continues to stage.
Dr Sam Hitchmough is Senior Lecturer in American Indian History at the University of Bristol, where he is also Director of Teaching/Programme Director in the History Department. He was previously Programme Director for American Studies at Canterbury Christ Church University. His research interests include the Red Power movement, the intersection between patriotism, protest and national narratives, Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Shows in the UK, and the use of American Indian imagery in British popular culture.
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