On the Beaten Track: Tourism, Art, and Place

by Lucy R. Lippard

Paperback, 2000

Status

Available

Publication

The New Press (2000), 192 pages

Description

In this "excellent" (The Baltimore Sun) book, Lucy R. Lippard weaves together cultural criticism, anthropology, and community activism for an in-depth look at how tourism sites are conceived and represented, and how they affect the places they transform. Critic Andrew Ross calls Lippard "the most surefooted tour guide you could hope for" in her exploration of being a tourist in one's own home, of how advertising and photography define place, of how antique shops function as populist museums, and of the commodification of indigenous cultures. With her characteristic breadth and critical eye, Lippard discusses the political economies of leisure spaces, the tourist's fascination with tragic destinations (such as the sites of massacres and nuclear weapons tests, or Holocaust memorials), and our willingness to let national parks and heritage sites define nature and history.… (more)

Original language

English

Physical description

192 p.; 7.75 inches

ISBN

1565846397 / 9781565846395

Local notes

Art Theory/History Criticism
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