- 156 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Authenticity and Authentication of Heritage
About This Book
Authenticity and Authentication of Heritage presents an assimilation of chapters that critically address some of the key emerging areas associated with authenticity. It presents a variety of inspiring pieces of work that range from host-guest authentication and intangible heritage to knowledge transfer processes, authenticating heritage in fairy-tale settings, authenticity and anxiety in the smell of death and life, understanding the boundaries of authenticity, nostalgia, sustainability, marketing, destination competitiveness, examining affective connotations of authenticity, and their contribution towards optimizing hedonic and eudaimonic well-being during times of disruption.
The contentious concept of authenticity continues to be valorised in heritage tourism. This scholarly initiative seeks to broaden the discursive parameters of authenticity and identify power mechanisms that shape the way authenticity is produced, marketed and consumed. This is an attempt to share contemporary views on how the contemporary notions of authenticity are derived, interpreted, applied, processed and legitimised in local and global contexts. Furthermore, the significant relationship between health and authenticity is explored. To put it simply, this pandemic has significantly halted the way people connect with their cultural resources and seek authenticity within their inner selves and the outside realms in the heritage tourism system. Heightened sense of global consciousness is a call to polish our authentic selves and elevate above inauthenticity or moral hypocrisy. So, is authenticity an evolving story or is it a story of floating immobility? Who can tell the story and who decides what elements to fossilise? How can existentialist authenticity and self authentication promote moral selving and well-being of the self and the society? Many questions like these have emerged in recent literature, and this book uses conceptual, empirical and theoretical explorations to identify and engage with such inquiries.
The chapters in this book, except for the concluding chapter, were originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Heritage Tourism.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Citation Information
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: authenticity and the authentication of heritage: dialogical perceptiveness
- 1 Hostâguest authentication of intangible cultural heritage: a literature review and conceptual model
- 2 Knowledge transfer processes in the authenticity of the intangible cultural heritage in tourism destination competitiveness
- 3 Development of intangible cultural heritage as a sustainable tourism resource: the intangible cultural heritage practitionersâ perspectives
- 4 Time, authenticity and photographic storytelling in The Museum of Innocence
- 5 Fairytale authenticity: historic city tourism, Harry Potter, medievalism and the magical gaze
- 6 âThe smell of death and the smell of lifeâ: authenticity, anxiety and perceptions of death at Varanasiâs cremation grounds
- 7 Using geographical and semiotic means to establish fixed points of a never-ending story: searching for parameters of authenticity in a case study of Australian history
- 8 The role of authenticity, experience quality, emotions, and satisfaction in a cultural heritage destination
- 9 Authenticity and nostalgia â subjective well-being of Chinese rural-urban migrants
- Conclusion: well-being and moral orientations of existentialist authenticity
- Index