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Humanities & Social Sciences

Tourism and Monarchy in Southeast Asia - Head Work

by Editor(s): Ploysri Porananond, Victor T. King

Description

Monarchies around the world play a significant role in tourism development and the tourist experience. Debates about the level of finance required to support monarchies often refer to the positive tourist attraction provided by royal pageantry, palaces, temples and churches, architecture, museum collections, and historical legacies. Up to now, the literature on tourism and monarchy has been primarily devoted to the history and experiences of Western Europe, particularly the United Kingdom. There has been little attention devoted to the relationship between monarchy and tourism development in Southeast Asia, and this is the first collection of essays to address this neglected field of study. The need to shift the focus from European to Asian royalty is important not only to begin to fill gaps in the literature on monarchy and tourism outside Europe, but also to avoid the increasing criticism of tourism studies that its major perspectives, orientations and paradigms have been based on an overly Eurocentric preoccupation. Case studies are taken from Thailand, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei Darussalam and Singapore.

Tourism and Monarchy in Southeast Asia

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Author Biography

Ploysri Porananond is Head of the Centre for Asian Tourism Research at Chiang Mai University, Thailand, and Editor-in-Chief of the Asian Journal of Tourism Research. Her research focuses on cultural tourism, as well as tourism and development in Thailand and Southeast Asia. Her publications include “Modernity and Evolution of a Festive Tourism Tradition: The Songkran Festival in Chiang Mai, Thailand” (2008), Rethinking Asian Tourism: Culture, Encounters and Local Response (edited with Victor T. King, 2014), “Tourism and Political Agendas in the Dum Hua Procession in the Songkran Festival” (2014), “Tourism and the Transformation of Ritual Practice with Sand Pagoda in Chiang Mai, Thailand” (2015), and “Khun Tok Dinner: The Transformation of a Lanna Eating Style into a Tourist Attraction in Chiang Mai, Thailand” (2015).Victor T. King is Emeritus Professor at the University of Leeds, UK, Professorial Research Associate at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, Adjunct Professor at Chiangmai University, Thailand, and Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Universiti Brunei Darussalam. He has long-standing research interests in the sociology and anthropology of Southeast Asia. His recent publications include The Historical Reconstruction of Southeast Asian Studies: Korea and Beyond (edited with Park Seung Woo 2013), Rethinking Asian Tourism: Culture, Encounters and Local Response (edited with Ploysri Porananond, 2014), and UNESCO in Southeast Asia: World Heritage Sites in Comparative Perspective (2016).

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