1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910616382703321

Titolo

Tourism in the Philippines : Communities, Hosts and Guests / / edited by Richard S. Aquino, Brooke A. Porter

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Singapore : , : Springer Nature Singapore : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2022

ISBN

981-19-4013-4

Edizione

[1st ed. 2022.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (179 pages)

Collana

Perspectives on Asian Tourism, , 2509-4211

Disciplina

338.47915990922

Soggetti

Industries

International business enterprises

Culture - Study and teaching

Social policy

International Business

History of Southeast Asia

Cultural Theory

Social Policy

Southeast Asia History

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Part I. Introduction -- Chapter 1. Tourism and the Filipino Culture and Society -- Part II. Tourism in Philippine Communities -- Chapter 2. Performance Assessment of Barangay Nagacadan as a Community-Based Tourist Destination -- Chapter 3. Stoked in the Sea: Understanding Stakeholder Perceptions of Surfing -- Chapter 4. Strolling Between Shanties: The Case of Smokey Tours’ Slum Tourism -- Chapter 5. Re-Creating Slum Tourism in Tondo, Manila: Perspectives of the Local Residents -- Chapter 6. Residents’ Perceptions of Tourism in a Pilgrimage Destination in the Philippines -- Part III. Travellers and Tourists’ Perspectives -- Chapter 7. The Travelling Filipina in Periodicals (1898-1938) -- Chapter 8. The Solo Filipina Traveller -- Chapter 9. Once Upon a Time in History: Tourist Perceptions of Dark Tourism in the Philippines -- Chapter 10. The KULAS Travelogues: A Deconstruction of Foreign Vloggers Depiction of Mindanao as a Travel Destination -- Chapter 11. “It’s More than Fun in the Philippines!” A



Grounded Theory Exploration of Tourist Eudaimonic Experience in the Philippines -- Part IV. Events and Festivals: Centring Filipino Culture and Spirituality -- Chapter 12. Postcolonial Appeal of Philippine Festivals -- Chapter 13. Reclaiming Culture: Innovating Traditional Religious Performance for Tourism in the Philippines -- Part V. Conclusion -- Chapter 14. Looking Forward: Tourism Growth in a Filipino Context.

Sommario/riassunto

This edited volume serves as the second instalment of a two-part title that aims to provide an academic exploration of the contemporary issues and perspectives on tourism in the Philippines. With a strong geographical focus, and drawn from a range of inter/multidisciplinary approaches, this book aims to provide a timely and critical investigation of issues surrounding Philippine host communities, Filipino travellers, and foreign tourists to the country. This book will serve as a platform to engage with mostly Filipino scholars allowing them to present their voices and perspectives on a range of local tourism issues, in support of cultivating a ‘culture of research’ in the Philippine academia. This book is one of the first country-focused volumes under the series, Perspectives on Asian Tourism. This book is composed of contributions drawn from the works of Filipino academics based in the Philippines and overseas institutions researching tourism issues in the Philippines. This book's contributions are drawn from a diverse set of disciplines including, but not limited to sociology, anthropology, mass communications, feminist and gender studies, cultural studies, history, and tourism and hospitality studies. Comprising chapters based on conceptual and empirical research, this edited book is divided into four parts: first, an introduction to tourism and the Filipino culture and society; second, case studies on the dynamics and impacts of tourism in local communities; third, an investigation of tourists’ gaze and experiences of Philippine destinations; and fourth, Filipino researchers’ reflexive gaze upon events, festivals, and culinary heritage in a tourism context. This book provides a collection of previously unexplored facets of Philippine tourism, Filipina tourists, and host communities, and could become an essential reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students, researchers, educators and policy-makers in tourism.