What is it about?

The study examines changes in the discourse concerning Israeli tourism to Turkey between 2000-2014. Drawing on the concept of geographical imagination and employing a critical cultural discourse analysis of travel stories published in the Israeli media, we analyze the extent to which changes have both reflected and resulted from changing relations between the two countries. Our analysis reveals that before 2010, Turkey was depicted in largely positive geo-cultural terms, imagined as a desired cosmopolitan, culturally ‘authentic’ destination, which elicits feelings of joy and peacefulness. More recent narratives, however, highlighted its negative geopolitical qualities, underscoring its anti-Israel stance and invoking a fearful discourse of political and ethno-religious radicalization. The study makes three contributions. First, by attending to the significance of perceptions in the social construction of tourist destinations, it brings the fields of tourism and cognitive geography into a closer dialogue. Second, by using a critical discourse analysis, it highlights the changing cultural contexts within which places are imagined and constructed by tourists. Finally, by uncovering the geographic complexities that undergird the discursive construction of places as tourist destinations, it illustrates how everyday narratives change over time, reflecting the dynamic nature of inter-state relations.

Featured Image

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: The Geographical imagination of Israeli tourists to Turkey, International Journal of Culture Tourism and Hospitality Research, June 2020, Emerald,
DOI: 10.1108/ijcthr-11-2019-0201.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page