Anthropology of tourism. Research strategies and ethnographic contexts.

Authors

  • Sara Pérez Barrera

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25145/j.pasos.2004.02.025

Keywords:

anthropology, tourism

Abstract

In my opinion, there are many ways of reading a book; either because the range of literature available is almost infinitely wide (it is not the same to read a novel as to read a didactic guide or a poetry anthology), or perhaps because our moods are influenced by the motivations (or obligations) that lead us to choose this or that book, the time available to immerse ourselves in the magical pleasure of reading, or even the recommendations and/or criticisms that we have had access to before starting to travel beyond words. In one way or another, what is certain, and of that we are all those who love reading, is that this hobby, this lifestyle or if you prefer this millennial hobby, creates addiction. That's the bad thing, it's addictive, and when you start reading, you forget about it until the world turns, and you can't stop until the book is finished, and you get rid of one of your responsibilities, and the stories of your personal life get mixed up with those of fiction, and the problems disappear when the novel is worthwhile, and that's why the personal imagination grows with each epic, and the ungrateful and inopportune daily life, which interrupts when you're in a hurry to read.

 

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Published

2004-06-27

How to Cite

Pérez Barrera, S. (2004). Anthropology of tourism. Research strategies and ethnographic contexts. PASOS Revista De Turismo Y Patrimonio Cultural, 2(2), 311–318. https://doi.org/10.25145/j.pasos.2004.02.025