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MacCannell’s Raison

MacCannell’s Raison. PhD in Rural Sociology Dissertation work in the Caribbean The Tourist came out ten years after his PhD was completed Based largely on Barthes Title not his, but actually the publisher’s idea. Roland Barthes. Signified Signifier SIGN. The Tourist.

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MacCannell’s Raison

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  1. MacCannell’s Raison • PhD in Rural Sociology • Dissertation work in the Caribbean • The Tourist came out ten years after his PhD was completed • Based largely on Barthes • Title not his, but actually the publisher’s idea

  2. Roland Barthes • Signified • Signifier • SIGN

  3. The Tourist • Marx was the first to discover the symbolic or fetishistic aspect of the commodity: its capacity to organize meaning and make us want things for reasons that go beyond our material needs • Needs become wants…

  4. Get Out There!

  5. Voyager of the Seas

  6. Chapter 1 • Increasingly, the pure experience, which leaves no material trace, is manufactured and sold like a commodity

  7. Chapter 1 • The value of things such as trips, shows, parades, events, sights, spectacles, courses, etc., is not determined by the amount of labor required for their production

  8. Chapter 1 • Their value is a function of the quality and quantity of experience they promise • Think of an actor or a sports entertainer

  9. Cultural Experience • All tourist attractions are cultural experiences • A cultural experience has two basic parts and a medium

  10. Cultural Experience(pp. 23 – 29) • Model: The representation of an aspect of life • Influence: The created, changed or intensified belief that is based on the model • Medium: An agency that connects a model and its influence

  11. Models • Models for individual personality, fashion and behavior are conveyed in motion pictures – but if there is any suspicion that mannerisms, clothing or other artifacts were put before the audience for the purpose of initiating a commercially exploitable fad, the fad will fail

  12. Modeling

  13. Modeling/Influence

  14. Production • A cultural model, its influence(s), the medium that links them, the audiences that form around them and the distributors

  15. Sightseeing(pp. 39-48) • Remember, as MacCannell mentioned in the introduction, the term “tourist” has two distinct meanings in his text:

  16. The Tourist • Middle class, in search of “experience” • Modern man in general • These two definitions are constantly played with throughout the MacCannell text

  17. Sightseeing • Briefly, sightseeing in modern society can serve as a representation of good and evil (often to reinforce a moral base)

  18. Sightseeing • Visiting the finer monuments and attractions of society produces feelings of respect and admiration (either for one’s own society or for the visited one)

  19. Sightseeing • Equally important, is the attitude of disgust associated with seeing muggings, abandoned buildings, polluted rivers, etc. • It helps to keep the moral order intact • It makes you glad as a tourist that you do not live there

  20. NegativeSightseeing • Rojek (1993), for example, develops a typology of attractions • One of his types is the “black hole” • A place where a famous person died (or was killed) • A place where a mass murder took place

  21. Devastation Tour

  22. Sightseeing • This balance that is created is often called “real” • Disneyland, and other “perfect” places seem to lack the “real” because they don’t have the dirty, undesirable parts • They seem to lack authenticity

  23. Structure of the Attraction • The attraction (be it good or bad) is an empirical relationship between a tourist, a sight and a marker

  24. Attraction • MacCannell plays with the terms “site” and “sight”, so be aware of the use of each one of those • A marker is a piece of information about a sight/site

  25. Marker • Markers can take several forms: • Souvenir matchbooks • Slide shows • Snow globes • Signs • Travel Channel shows

  26. Attraction • Attractions are often indistinguishable from their less famous relatives

  27. Sight • Most tourists (being middle class modern men/women) cannot visually determine an attraction – they must have markers to tell them which rocks are moon rocks, and therefore worth seeing

  28. Sight • Would the average person (the tourist), know which piece of modern art was worth visiting, which building was important or which vineyard had the best grapes?

  29. Sight/Marker • We need a sign to say that a vineyard is Mondovi • We need a marker to indicate which building is a Van der Rohe • We need a marker to tell us which is a Matisse (and even why Matisse is important)

  30. Sight/Souvenir • MacCannell distinguishes between sights and souvenirs by saying that sights are collected by entire societies, souvenirs are collected by individuals • In this sense, the sight is elevated and has cultural significance

  31. Sight • The tourist, because of the use of markers, has no problem figuring out which sights she ought to see

  32. Mona • The Louvre example suggests that even in a place full of things to see, some (the Mona Lisa) are the sights (collected by everyone) and the rest are just souvenirs (collected by individuals that found them interesting) • The Mona Lisa is clearly identified by numerous markers

  33. Sight Sacralization • This is based on the tourist’s desire to see certain sites/sights, that have become “must see” items for a given culture (take the Grand Canyon on the book’s cover)

  34. Sight Sacralization • Visiting these sites is a form of ritual, and one often performs these “rituals” without even thinking about it – if one goes to France, one “must see” Paris, and when in Paris, one “must see” the Eiffel Tower • (The question arises – do you seem them because you really want to or because they are “must see” attractions and everyone will ask if you saw it?)

  35. Sight Sacralization • People save their money (thousands of dollars sometimes) to make the “pilgrimage” to see these sights

  36. Sight Sacralization • The exception is the local • The Manhattanite who has never been to the Statue of Liberty is a mythic image in our society • It is the reverse of the city person that visits the country to see things the locals care little about

  37. Sight Sacralization • Sights take on power with the tourist – some want to be alone and are annoyed by the presence of other tourists • Sometimes, the sight is re-named, like Manhattan or San Francisco are often called “The City” (decidedly as proper nouns)

  38. Sight Sacralization • This is how MacCannell explains the emergence of sights to the common mentality • There are five stages…

  39. Marker • The first stage is marking the sight – this is called the naming phase • Often a great deal of work goes into an object (determining its age, historic relevance, recreational value, etc.)

  40. Framing and Elevation • After a sight is named, it is framed/elevated – put on display • This can be a literal pedestal (elevation), or it can be a boundary (framing)

  41. Framing • Protection: Cage, glass, ropes, guards • Enhancement: Spotlights • Often, guards or glass can be read by tourists as enhancements, so often framing types can merge in the mind of the tourist

  42. Enshrinement • When the framing material has itself been named (marked), the original attraction has now become enshrined • Half Dome is inside of Yosemite National Park, so the valley has been enshrined

  43. Mechanical Reproduction • The object gets reproduced • Postcards • Models • Prints • T-shirts • It is the mechanical reproduction phase that usually sets the tourist in motion – and he is not disappointed – alongside the copies, he now sees the real thing

  44. Social Reproduction • Society takes on the attraction • Groups name themselves after a destination • Cities and regions take on the name of a famous attraction

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