Arts & Photography 
Audio CDs 
Audiocassettes 
Biographies & Memoirs 
Business & Investing 
Children's Books 
Christianity 
Comics & Graphic Novels 
Computers & Internet 
Cooking, Food & Wine 
Entertainment 
Gay & Lesbian 
Health, Mind & Body 
History 
Home & Garden 
Horror 
Literature & Fiction 
Mystery & Thrillers 
Nonfiction 
Outdoors & Nature 
Parenting & Families 
Professional & Technical 
Reference 
Religion & Spirituality 
Romance 
Science 
Science Fiction & Fantasy 
Sports 
Teens 
Travel 
Women's Fiction 
           | 
    
    
    
      
  | 
Venice, the Tourist Maze : A Cultural Critique of the World's Most Touristed City |  
List Price: $21.95 
Your Price: $21.95 | 
  | 
 
  |  
| 
 |  
| Product Info | 
Reviews | 
 
 << 1 >>   
Rating:   Summary: Venice, the Tourist Maze Review: A must for the regular visitor of Venice. Davis and Marvin show clearly how the historical center and the outskirts (!) are sacrifized to the needs of mass-tourism. They describe  how the the city is transformed sytematically into a historical theme-park in which the remaining locals have only a stage-role. And 'resistance is useless': the inhabitants are able to slow, not to stop the process. The book predicts an ominous future of this cultural heritage site. Food for thought.
  Rating:   Summary: Venice, the Tourist Maze Review: A must for the regular visitor of Venice. Davis and Marvin show clearly how the historical center and the outskirts (!) are sacrifized to the needs of mass-tourism. They describe how the the city is transformed sytematically into a historical theme-park in which the remaining locals have only a stage-role. And 'resistance is useless': the inhabitants are able to slow, not to stop the process. The book predicts an ominous future of this cultural heritage site. Food for thought.
  Rating:   Summary: Been There, Lived That, Right On! Review: As an inveterate traveler, I usually find that books about places I have visited leave me sorry I read them - travel guides are often so filled with tourist hype or stereotypical portrayals or out-dated analysis. But, this is not a travel guide: it is a thoughful and well-researched critique of Venice as both a tourist city and a (struggling to remain) actual city.
 
 Over the years I have related to Venice in three ways:  a member of the day-trip brigade (with two children in tow); a more serious tourist making a five day stay of it; a long-term (six month) resident in one of its working class neighborhoods.  From all of those perspectives, this book speaks to my experiences.  
 
 But, more than a souvenir of my times there (see the excellent discussion of the role of souvenirs in a tourist city), this work has opened my mind to other ways to see my beloved city.  I now see the city and its people with new eyes, for the authors' critical eyes and ideas challenged me to experience Venice once again anew.  
 
 If, as I would claim, I love Venezia, then I would also want to engage my heart and soul in the challenge they pose for the future of the city: not the worries about "sinking into the sea" but the worries about becoming "lost in the tourists."
 
 And did you know that tourists have been coming here for over 500 years (yes, fellow Americans, that is before any tourists invaded North America), and that tacky souvenirs have been available for at least 300 years?  Lots more to know as well as ponder in this work.
 
 
 
 
 << 1 >>   
 |  
  |   
     |   
     |