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Tourism Development and the Environment: Beyond Sustainability? challenges the sustainable tourism development paradigm that has come to dominate both theoretical and practical approaches to tourism development over the last two decades. It extends the sustainable tourism debate beyond the arguably managerialist 'blueprint' and destination-focused approach that continues to characterise even the most recent 'sustainability' agenda within tourism development. Reviewing the evolution of the sustainable tourism development concept, its contemporary manifestations in academic literature and policy developments and processes, the author compares its limitations to prevailing political-economic, s...
Preliminary Material /Sarah Montin and Evelyn Tsitas -- 'The Only Thing to be Deplored is the Extraordinary Mortality': Flinders Island and the Imagination of the British Empire /Tom Lawson -- Zombies in the Colonies: Imperialism and Contestation of Ethno-Political Space in Max Brooks' The Zombie Survival Guide /Robert A. Saunders -- The Perilous Sites of the Atlantikwall /Rose Tzalmona -- 'Monstrous Homes': How Private Spaces Shape Characters' Identities in 19th-Century Sensation Fiction /Christina Flotmann -- Enchanted Microcosm or Apocalyptic Warzone? Human Projections into the Bug World /Petra Rehling -- Monstrous Breeding Grounds: Creation, Isolation and Suffering at Noble's Island, Hailsham and Rankstadt /Evelyn Tsitas -- How the Earth Went Bad: From Wells' The War of the Worlds to the Zombie Apocalypse in the 21st Century /Simon Bacon -- 'Strange Outlandish Star': Spaces of Horror in the Poems and Memoirs of the War Poets /Sarah Montin -- Unsettling Empty Spaces, Displacing Terra Nullius /Thea Costantino -- Morgues, Museums and the Ghost of Errol Flynn /Erin Ashenhurst -- Architecture after Fukushima: Spaces of Bara Bara, Spaces of Reciprocity /Yutaka Sho.
The Media of Testimony explores testimony relating to the Stasi in different cultural forms: autobiographical writing, memorial museums and documentary film. Combining theoretical models from diverse disciplines, it presents a new approach to the study of testimony, memory and mediation.
The Oxford Handbook of Tourism History offers a critical survey of the development of the field that unites historical scholarship along thematic lines and uses examples from diverse places to examine a wide set of tourism policies, practices, and niches in a global, transnational context.
This book examines how Lampedusa, Italy’s southernmost island, has become a transnational symbol representing migration to Europe from the Global South. It analyses how three very different associations have used the name “Lampedusa” as a means of restoring a sense of subjectivity or agency to migrants themselves. Jacopo Colombini argues that the work of the Archivio delle Memorie Migranti (Rome), the self-organised refugee group Lampedusa in Hamburg, and the Lampedusa-based Collettivo Askavusa offers an alternative to the stereotypical, often racially connoted, public discussion of migrant presence in Italy and Europe. He also demonstrates, however, that the marginalisation of migrant and refugee voices in the public discourse is also partially and unavoidably reproduced in the cultural projects that wish to restore their agency.
What is often held to be Britain's 'finest hour' – the Second World War – was not experienced so uniformly across the British Isles. On the margins, the war was endured in profoundly different ways. While D-Day or Dunkirk is embedded in British collective memory, how many Britons can recall that Finns were interned on the Isle of Man, that enemy soldiers developed British infrastructure in Orkney, or that British subjects were sent to concentration camps from Guernsey? Such experiences, tangential to the dominant British war narrative, are commemorated elsewhere in the 'other British Isles'. In this remarkable contribution to British Island Studies, Daniel Travers pursues these histories and their commemoration across numerous local sites of memory: museums, heritage sites and public spaces. He examines the way these island identities assert their own distinctiveness over the British wartime story, and ultimately the way they fit into the ongoing discourse about how the memory of the Second World War has been constructed since 1945.
This book provides a comprehensive examination of death, dying, and human remains in museums and heritage sites around the world. Presenting a diverse range of contributions from scholars, practitioners, and artists, the book reminds us that death and the dead body are omnipresent in museum and heritage spaces. Chapters appraise collection practices and their historical context, present global perspectives and potential resolutions, and suggest how death and dying should be presented to the public. Acknowledging that professionals in the galleries, libraries, archives, and museums (GLAM) fields are engaging in vital discussions about repatriation and anti-colonialist narratives, the book inc...
John Thomas Klumph was born in Germany, 1729 and settled in New York.
History of settlers as well as Indians in the northern counties of Idaho including extensive biographical sketches of prominent citizens.
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