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Glances on tourists' identities, North and South (D3)Location TM144 Convenor(s)Bertrand Réau (University of Lyon 1) bertrand.reau@wanadoo.fr Short abstractTourism is a polymorphic object which provides the possibility to renew our conception of globalisation, especially with the rise in tourism from Southern countries. This panel seeks to capture tourism through comparative analysis of the practices and identities of tourists from the North and South. Long abstractFor anthropologists the study of tourism provides a means of understanding the transformations which accompany globalisation. Tourism not only favours a kind of interconnectedness between people and populations, it is also an important issue from an economic and political point of view. Tourism implies multiple representations of otherness and it questions the different values a society holds. As a polymorphic object, tourism provides us the possibility to renew our conception of globalisation, especially as regards to "traditional" themes such as: identities and cultures, the construction of marketplaces and the crafting of public policies, and North-South relationships.
Chair: Bertrand Réau (CRIS-CSE) PapersNorth-South exchanges through a popular tourist organisation related to the trade union movementAbstractTourisme et Travail, a popular tourist organization linked to the CGT (confédération générale du travail, main french alliance), created in 1944, whose main clients are works councils, considers holidays as a means of education and political consciousness for a popular public. The Maghrebi countries constitute before and after the independances, from the 1950's to the 1970's, favored destinations for this organization. Their proximity indeed enables low cost journeys in countries with undeniable touristic qualities. The ways in which these holidays in countries of the South are presented to Tourisme et travail's tourists, of popular origin but from countries of the North, as well as the practices and encounters between the tourists and the autochtones, are revealing of Tourisme et travail's political project and of its ambiguity.
In comers / out comers? Images of early tourists in Central Africa, 'indigenous' people visiting mother countryAbstractWhat does a Western tourist wish to see in Central Africa, and what is showed to African visitors in Europe?
Work or tourism? The ambiguity of a humanitarian and charitable practice in IndiaAbstractHundreds of western volunteers work for a few weeks or several months every year, in reception centres for sick, injured or dying people run by the Missionaries of Charity, the religious order founded by Mother Teresa in Calcutta. Simple tasks (cleaning, first aid, etc.) liken this voluntary involvement to amateur humanitarian work, which is particularly well-suited to the aspirations of people lacking the specific skills for more professional activities. The amateur nature of the practice gives this voluntary work an ambiguous quality: it can be viewed as a humanitarian activity or a tourist activity. More precisely, it represents an atypical form of tourism, which could be considered as "humanitarian tourism". In this universe, however, dedicated to the assistance of poor Indian people, the "tourist", whose trip has no other goal than that of a presence in India, remains an illegitimate figure and the attributes associated with "ordinary tourism" (sightseeing, relaxation, spending, etc.) are generally stigmatized. A majority of volunteers do not indeed consider their stay as a holiday trip, even if the exotic framework of voluntary work in the Missionaries of Charity Centres (which radically differs from voluntary practices in the country of origin), is one of the reasons which frequently motivates the trip. Therefore, to understand this specific figure of tourism, we must at the same time explain the ambiguity of the practice and the meaning that the volunteers give to their practice. e-paper Solidarity tourism: the misunderstandings of the meeting between some French tourists and Burkina Faso inhabitantsAbstract "Solidarity tourism" promises in particular an "authentic" meeting between tourists and visited villagers. A participating observation in a village of Burkina Faso accommodating French tourists, made it possible to observe and analyze the nature of interactions between tourists and inhabitants and to note that they are largely based on "misunderstanding". The latter which is related to the stereotypes and come mainly from reciprocal ignorance, hide other more delicate misunderstandings created or reinforced by solidarity tourism ideologies and discourses and transmitted by the NGO Tourism & Development association (TDS). This intervention based on notes of ground and interviews shows the illusory meeting caused by the majority of these misunderstandings. Moreover, this "illusion" is built and manipulated by TDS, by villagers and finally by tourists themselves.
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