Heritage, Tourism, and Race

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A01=Antoinette T Jackson
African American Business Owners
African American tourism experiences
African American Travel
American Beach
Amistad Research Center
Author_Antoinette T Jackson
Black Fish
Category=GLZ
Christopher Family
cultural geography analysis
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Ethnicity Hypothesis
Fish Camps
Goat Island
Hillsborough River
Kingsley Plantation
KKK.
Mammoth Cave
Mammoth Cave National Park
museum studies scholarship
National Park Site
public history research
racialized leisure spaces
Segregated Parish
Shenandoah National Park
Shrewsbury Road
social exclusion theory
spatial justice studies
Spring Hill
State Historic Marker
Stephen Bishop
Sulphur Springs
White Space
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367464844
  • Weight: 172g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Apr 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Heritage, Tourism, and Race views heritage and leisure tourism in the Americas through the lens of race, and is especially concerned with redressing gaps in recognizing and critically accounting for African Americans as an underrepresented community in leisure.

Fostering critical public discussions about heritage, travel, tourism, leisure, and race, Jackson addresses the underrepresentation of African American leisure experiences and links Black experiences in this area to discussions of race, place, spatial imaginaries, and issues of segregation and social control explored in the fields of geography, architecture, and the law. Most importantly, the book emphasizes the importance of shifting public dialogue from a singular focus on those groups who are disadvantaged within a system of racial hierarchy, to those actors and institutions exerting power over racialized others through practices of exclusion.

Heritage, Tourism, and Race will be invaluable reading for academics and students engaged in the study of museums, as well as architecture, anthropology, public history, and a range of other disciplines. It will also be of interest to museum and heritage professionals and those studying the construction and control of space and how this affects and reveals the narratives of marginalized communities.

Antoinette T. Jackson is a Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of South Florida in Tampa and Director of the USF Heritage Research Lab. She received a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Florida, an M.B.A. from Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio, and a B.A. in Computer and Information Science from Ohio State University. Her last book, Speaking for the Enslaved—Heritage Interpretation at Antebellum Plantation Sites, was published in 2012 (Routledge).

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