Destination Culture
Tourism, Museums, and Heritage
311 pages, 7 x 10 inches, 98 black-and-white photographs
September 1998, Available worldwide
Categories: Art; Art Theory; Popular Culture; Cultural Anthropology; Travel
September 1998, Available worldwide
Categories: Art; Art Theory; Popular Culture; Cultural Anthropology; Travel
Free online edition (eScholarship)--available only to University of California faculty, staff, and students (List of public titles)
"Destination Culture is a book of discovery. Reading it is to accompany Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett through fairs and museums, as a tourist and as an always sharp observer of people. The power of this book is to show how first-rate ethnographic work is also the stuff of cultural studies. This volume, including her widely cited "Exhibiting Jews," shows why there are few commentators on the cultural scene who are as insightful, critical—and often funny—as Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett."—Sander L. Gilman, author of Smart Jews
"A book of wide appeal that has few rivals . . . . It develops an original perspective on museums and other forums for displaying culture and art and does so in a witty and accessible style."—Ivan Karp, coeditor of Museums and Communities
"A book of wide appeal that has few rivals . . . . It develops an original perspective on museums and other forums for displaying culture and art and does so in a witty and accessible style."—Ivan Karp, coeditor of Museums and Communities
Destination Culture takes the reader on an eye-opening journey from ethnological artifacts to kitsch. Posing the question, "What does it mean to show?" Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett explores the agency of display in a variety of settings: museums, festivals, world's fairs, historical re-creations, memorials, and tourist attractions. She talks about how objects—and people—are made to "perform" their meaning for us by the very fact of being collected and exhibited, and about how specific techniques of display, not just the things shown, convey powerful messages.
Her engaging analysis shows how museums compete with tourism in the production of "heritage." To make themselves profitable, museums are marketing themselves as tourist attractions. To make locations into destinations, tourism is staging the world as a museum of itself. Both promise to deliver heritage. Although heritage is marketed as something old, she argues that heritage is actually a new mode of cultural production that gives a second life to dying ways of life, economies, and places. The book concludes with a lively commentary on the "good taste/bad taste" debate in the ephemeral "museum of the life world," where everyone is a curator of sorts and the process of converting life into heritage begins.
Her engaging analysis shows how museums compete with tourism in the production of "heritage." To make themselves profitable, museums are marketing themselves as tourist attractions. To make locations into destinations, tourism is staging the world as a museum of itself. Both promise to deliver heritage. Although heritage is marketed as something old, she argues that heritage is actually a new mode of cultural production that gives a second life to dying ways of life, economies, and places. The book concludes with a lively commentary on the "good taste/bad taste" debate in the ephemeral "museum of the life world," where everyone is a curator of sorts and the process of converting life into heritage begins.
Destination Art, by Amy Dempsey
Venice, the Tourist Maze: A Cultural Critique of the World's Most Touristed City, by Robert C. Davis and Garry R. Marvin
Doing the Town: The Rise of Urban Tourism in the United States, 1850-1915, by Catherine Cocks
On Holiday: A History of Vacationing, by Orvar Löfgren
The Tourist: A New Theory of the Leisure Class, by Dean MacCannell
Venice, the Tourist Maze: A Cultural Critique of the World's Most Touristed City, by Robert C. Davis and Garry R. Marvin
Doing the Town: The Rise of Urban Tourism in the United States, 1850-1915, by Catherine Cocks
On Holiday: A History of Vacationing, by Orvar Löfgren
The Tourist: A New Theory of the Leisure Class, by Dean MacCannell















