1st Edition

The Tourists Gaze, The Cretans Glance Archaeology and Tourism on a Greek Island

By Philip Duke Copyright 2007
    156 Pages
    by Routledge

    156 Pages
    by Routledge

    As researchers bring their analytic skills to bear on contemporary archaeological tourism, they find that it is as much about the present as the past. Philip Duke’s study of tourists gazing at the remains of Bronze Age Crete highlights this nexus between past and present, between exotic and mundane. Using personal diaries, ethnographic interviews, site guidebooks, and tourist brochures, Duke helps us understand the impact that archaeological sites, museums and the constructed past have on tourists’ view of their own culture, how it legitimizes class inequality at home as well as on the island of Crete, both Minoan and modern.

    Chapter One Touring the Past; Chapter Two The Minoan Past; Chapter Three Tourists and the Constructed Past; Chapter Four Modern Crete, Ancient Minoans, and the Tourist Experience; Chapter Five Constructing a Prehistory; Chapter Six The Nexus of the Past;

    Biography

    Philip Duke