L’altérité et le tourisme : construction du soi et d’une identité sociale

This article examines one of the reasons why third world alterity is one of the motors of tourism. What do travelers seek when they visit those remote sites? A stop in a village built by the government of Myanmar where women with exotic cultural practices can be photographed led me to raise this que...

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Main Author: Anne-Marie d’Hauteserre
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille 2009-04-01
Series:Espace populations sociétés
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/eps/3693
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author Anne-Marie d’Hauteserre
author_facet Anne-Marie d’Hauteserre
author_sort Anne-Marie d’Hauteserre
collection DOAJ
description This article examines one of the reasons why third world alterity is one of the motors of tourism. What do travelers seek when they visit those remote sites? A stop in a village built by the government of Myanmar where women with exotic cultural practices can be photographed led me to raise this question. Landscapes as much as spaces, including tourist destinations, are socially constructed to enable those who cross them to confirm their subjectivity. Looking at attitudes and practices of tourists and tour operators allows us to explore how exotic or everyday landscapes support selective self-identities and a hierarchy of social differentiations. Tourists do not look for true alterity but rather for the possibility of encountering its romantic mystery whose staging makes more familiar. The form of exoticism marketed by tourism is but a pale imitation of voyages of exploration of past centuries. However, it permits tourists who enjoy only short holidays, to construct some cultural capital while they work on maintaining their social hierarchical position relative to local residents and other visitors. Far from leading to an understanding of others, the staging of their alterity is used for self-identity construction and to justify such practices. These practices do remain constrained, however, by the social and cultural habitus of tourists, whatever their origins, and by the demands of international capital.
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spelling doaj.art-a34f7b5cfc8a49dabe94a4762a9b5ba82022-12-21T23:39:19ZengUniversité des Sciences et Technologies de LilleEspace populations sociétés0755-78092104-37522009-04-012009227929110.4000/eps.3693L’altérité et le tourisme : construction du soi et d’une identité socialeAnne-Marie d’HauteserreThis article examines one of the reasons why third world alterity is one of the motors of tourism. What do travelers seek when they visit those remote sites? A stop in a village built by the government of Myanmar where women with exotic cultural practices can be photographed led me to raise this question. Landscapes as much as spaces, including tourist destinations, are socially constructed to enable those who cross them to confirm their subjectivity. Looking at attitudes and practices of tourists and tour operators allows us to explore how exotic or everyday landscapes support selective self-identities and a hierarchy of social differentiations. Tourists do not look for true alterity but rather for the possibility of encountering its romantic mystery whose staging makes more familiar. The form of exoticism marketed by tourism is but a pale imitation of voyages of exploration of past centuries. However, it permits tourists who enjoy only short holidays, to construct some cultural capital while they work on maintaining their social hierarchical position relative to local residents and other visitors. Far from leading to an understanding of others, the staging of their alterity is used for self-identity construction and to justify such practices. These practices do remain constrained, however, by the social and cultural habitus of tourists, whatever their origins, and by the demands of international capital.http://journals.openedition.org/eps/3693alterityexoticismlandscapeself makingsocial identitytourism
spellingShingle Anne-Marie d’Hauteserre
L’altérité et le tourisme : construction du soi et d’une identité sociale
Espace populations sociétés
alterity
exoticism
landscape
self making
social identity
tourism
title L’altérité et le tourisme : construction du soi et d’une identité sociale
title_full L’altérité et le tourisme : construction du soi et d’une identité sociale
title_fullStr L’altérité et le tourisme : construction du soi et d’une identité sociale
title_full_unstemmed L’altérité et le tourisme : construction du soi et d’une identité sociale
title_short L’altérité et le tourisme : construction du soi et d’une identité sociale
title_sort l alterite et le tourisme construction du soi et d une identite sociale
topic alterity
exoticism
landscape
self making
social identity
tourism
url http://journals.openedition.org/eps/3693
work_keys_str_mv AT annemariedhauteserre lalteriteetletourismeconstructiondusoietduneidentitesociale