Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1007067 Annals of Tourism Research 2014 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Consumptive practices of sports tourists at the Tour de France were explored.•The French Alps were authenticated as Tour de France “space” via “hot” and “cool” processes.•“Hot” authentication manifested through embodied and collective practices.•Kinaesthetically embodied performances were powerful “hot” authentication acts.•Mediation of encounters with place reinforced and amplified “hot” authentication.

Social processes ascribing authenticity to touristic phenomena is an area of tourism theory lacking empirical insights. This paper addresses the French Alps as a historically significant landscape for the Tour de France and presents an empirical exploration of Cohen and Cohen’s (2012) theoretical framework of authentication in tourism. Using the context of a commercially organized tour, social practices of sports tourists which reinforced and amplified the status of the French Alps as authentic “Tour space” are analyzed. Embodied cycling excursions combined with collective, participatory roadside practices constituted performative acts of authentication, whilst mediation of encounters with places of sporting significance highlighted authentication as a cyclical process.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management
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