4.6 Article

Tourism Imaginary and Landscape at Heritage Site: A Case in Honghe Hani Rice Terraces, China

Journal

LAND
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land10040439

Keywords

tourism; landscape; imaginary; cultural heritage site; cultural conflict; local communities

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This article examines the cultural relationships between tourism and landscape, using the Honghe Hani Terraces in China as a case study. It reveals a gap between tourist imaginaries and the actual landscape, with the dominance of tourism company's strategies leading to marginalization of local communities and threats to the landscape. The study suggests that maintaining the integrity of landscape in tourism imaginaries and empowering local communities can help reduce cultural tensions between tourism and the landscape.
The relationship between tourism and landscape has been extensively studied, but a conceptual framework to study cultural relationships between tourism and landscape is not specified in the literature. On the basis of the theory of social imaginary, this article takes China's Honghe Hani Terraces as an example to study how the landscape is imagined in tourism and the potential cultural conflicts. Content analysis on tourist discourses and images in social media was conducted in order to identify tourist imaginaries about the landscape. A gap between tourism imaginaries and the Hani landscape was found: the latter was imagined as an overlooking view of stereotyped terraced imagery, a schema separated and independent from other landscape components. In-depth interviews on stakeholders and participant observations were used to study the production process of tourism imaginaries. Findings show that the viewing platforms and roads provided an enclave space from local contexts, wherein the Hani landscape was staged for gazing. The tourism company's strategies dominated the process, leading to local communities' marginalization and threats to the landscape. We suggest that tourism planning and marketing should maintain the integrity of landscape in tourism imaginaries and empower the local communities, thereby reducing cultural tensions between tourism and the landscape.

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