Deviance and Risk on Holiday

Deviance and Risk on Holiday
Author: D. Briggs
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2013-01-01
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 9781349437856

This book represents the first attempt to step inside the holiday experience of young British tourists in San Antonio, Ibiza. Briggs' ethnographic study reveals the ugly truth about how and why they get involved in deviance and risk-taking when they go abroad, driven by self validation and a commodified social context.

OECD Tourism Trends and Policies 2020

OECD Tourism Trends and Policies 2020
Author: OECD
Publisher: OECD Publishing
Total Pages: 387
Release: 2020-03-04
Genre:
ISBN: 9264626883

The 2020 edition analyses tourism performance and policy trends across 51 OECD countries and partner economies. It highlights the need for coherent and comprehensive approaches to tourism policy making, and the significance of the tourism economy, with data covering domestic, inbound and outbound tourism, enterprises and employment, and internal tourism consumption.

Masculinity and Danger on the Eighteenth-century Grand Tour

Masculinity and Danger on the Eighteenth-century Grand Tour
Author: Sarah Goldsmith
Publisher: Institute of Historical Research
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2020
Genre: Grand tours (Education)
ISBN: 9781912702213

The Grand Tour, a customary trip of Europe undertaken by British nobility and wealthy landed gentry during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, played an important role in the formation of contemporary notions of elite masculinity. 0Examining testimony as written by Grand Tourists, tutors and their families, Goldsmith demonstrates that the Grand Tour educated elite young men in a wide variety of skills, virtues and masculine behaviours that extended well beyond polite society. She argues that dangerous experiences were far more central to the Tour as a means of constructing Britain's next generation of leaders than has previously been examined. Influenced by aristocratic concepts of honour and inspired by military leadership, elites viewed experiences of danger and hardship as powerfully transformative and therefore as central to the process of constructing masculinity.0Far from viewing danger as a disruptive force, Grand Tourists willingly tackled a variety of social, geographical and physical perils, gambling their way through treacherous landscapes; scaling mountains, volcanoes and glaciers; and encountering war and disease. Through the study of danger, Goldsmith offers a revision of eighteenth-century elite masculine culture and the critical role the Grand Tour played within this.