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Volume 5, December 2004
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Leisure
Traveling for 21st Century Americans: Mass Tourism as a
Cultural Trap |
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OVIDIU ANICULĂESE |
Al. I. Cuza University, Iași
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Abstract |
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The
majority of mass men in the American environment exhibit
predictable and similar patterns of behavior as tourists.
Pre-Industrial Revolution modes of traveling as liberation
and exploration are now thwarted by the leveling effect of
globalization and the illusion of information fueled by the
all-pervasive mass media. Claims about the role of routine
or the quest for authenticity are challenged as genuine
motivations for mass tourism. Both the American culture and
travel destinations in developing countries have authentic
content that is largely ignored in favor of sensationalism
and cliché. Excessive regimentation in the US creates the
acute need for transcending to which popular culture finds
accessible solutions through tourism: an experience of
concentrated yet vague exoticism which feels liberating
without yielding exploration. Travel destinations are shaped
to American standards of material comfort and even adopt
western popular culture icons in an effort to supply
accessible familiar experiences of western entertainment.
Various kinds of difficulty that once stimulated travelers
are now relieved by travel agencies, rendering the
experience of traveling less personal and more like TV
entertainment. Old notions of space, time and reality itself
are blurred in favor of a hyper-reality where fiction
dominates.
Keywords: mass man;
routine; authenticity; sensationalism; exoticism;
predictability; material comfort; accessible experience;
package holiday; hyper-reality |
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