Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1007876 | Annals of Tourism Research | 2011 | 21 Pages |
This paper uses postcolonial theory to analyze Jamaica Kincaid’s quasi-autobiographical book, A Small Place. Kincaid’s critique of tourism in Antigua reverses traditional travel writing trends in which First World perceptions of the Third World dominate. She discursively dismantles the imaginative geographies of empire that cement binary oppositions, such as tourist/native and black/white. She collapses these binaries to illustrate the intricate ways in which the global neocolonial ethos created by economic dependencies manifest. Arguing that tourism is implicated in this hegemonic process, she utilizes the metaphor of a guided tour to redirect the imperial gaze. Kincaid argues that legacies of colonial oppression can change once tourist and host value the same things in the shared space of the contact zone.
Research highlights► Tourism is implicated in the neocolonial ethos. ► The imperial gaze is redirected by historicizing and politicizing the tourist gaze. ► Legacies of colonialism can be transformed through shared values.