Foreigners, fakes and flycatchers: stereotypes, social encounters and the problem of discomfort on the street in Arusha, Tanzania

IF 2.7 Q2 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM
Martin Loeng
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This paper aims to contribute to research on the interrelations between urban tourism, travelling and landscapes. It shows how young visitors to the tourism-reliant city of Arusha, northern Tanzania, experience and interpret discomfiting encounters with street sellers by drawing on stereotypes circulating in guidebooks, online forums and in the tourism industry. In turn, such re-interpreted encounters are increasingly seen as problematic for the city’s development of urban tourism.,The author draws on extensive ethnographic fieldwork with tourist-product street sellers in Arusha and Moshi, Tanzania in 2015–2017. With detail-oriented focus on social interaction and communication, the author has used participant observation and interviews to understand the perspectives and actions involved. Complementing this, the author draws on interviews with tour companies and local authorities to connect everyday occurrences with broader political, economic and urban transformations.,This paper explores the interrelation between changing urban landscapes, gentrification and burgeoning urban tourism by highlighting not only how streets are created and sought to be re-created but how also re-interpreted stories and stereotypes fundamentally influence how it is understood by local authorities. As the consumption of place, shopping and foreigners’ experiences take centre stage in Arusha’s urban development project, practices and people that are re-interpreted as causes of discomfort, become objects of ordering and discipline.,This paper emphasizes that the social encounters beyond dichotomies of host–guest relationships are a fruitful and important means of investigating how “encounters” connect space to power, the street to urban planning and mundane on-the-street interactions to processes of transformation and gentrification. This paper presents a reading of “landscapes” not as a text, but as a series of encounters that catch our attention when and where they break our norms, or the norms of others.
外国人、骗子和捕蝇者:刻板印象、社会遭遇和坦桑尼亚阿鲁沙街头的不适问题
本文旨在对城市旅游、旅游与景观之间的相互关系进行研究。它展示了坦桑尼亚北部依赖旅游业的城市阿鲁沙的年轻游客如何通过旅游指南、在线论坛和旅游业中流传的刻板印象来体验和解释与街头小贩的尴尬遭遇。反过来,这种重新诠释的相遇越来越被视为城市旅游发展的问题。作者在2015-2017年对坦桑尼亚阿鲁沙和莫西的旅游产品街头小贩进行了广泛的民族志实地调查。作者以细节为导向,关注社会互动和沟通,采用参与式观察和访谈来了解所涉及的观点和行动。除此之外,作者还利用对旅游公司和地方当局的采访,将日常事件与更广泛的政治、经济和城市变革联系起来。本文探讨了不断变化的城市景观、中产阶级化和新兴城市旅游业之间的相互关系,不仅强调了街道是如何被创造和重新创造的,而且强调了重新解释的故事和刻板印象是如何从根本上影响地方当局对其的理解的。随着地方消费、购物和外国人的经历成为阿鲁沙城市发展项目的中心,那些被重新解释为不舒服的原因的做法和人,成为了命令和纪律的对象。本文强调,超越主客关系二分法的社会相遇是研究“相遇”如何将空间与权力、街道与城市规划以及世俗的街头互动与转型和士绅化过程联系起来的一种富有成效和重要的手段。本文呈现的“风景”解读不是文本,而是一系列的遭遇,它们在何时何地打破了我们的规范或他人的规范,引起了我们的注意。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Culture, Tourism, and Hospitality Research focuses on building bridges in theory, research, and practice across the inter-related fields of culture, tourism and hospitality. Published with the IACTHR it encourages articles that advance theory and research on the roles of culture, tourism, and hospitality in the lives of individuals, households, and organizations. This includes the perspectives and interpretations of all stakeholders including participants and providers of tourism and hospitality services. The journal especially seeks to nurture interdisciplinary multicultural work among sociological, psychological, geographical, consumer, leisure, marketing, travel and tourism, hospitality, and sport and entertainment researchers. IJCTHR covers: -Tourist culture and behaviour -Marketing practices in tourism and hospitality, and how this relates to cultures -Consumer behaviour and trends in tourism and hospitality -Destination culture and destination marketing -International tourism and hospitality
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