Article published In: Narrative Inquiry
Vol. 23:2 (2013) ► pp.227–244
Homeland tour guide narratives and the discursive construction of the diasporic
Published online: 18 April 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.23.2.01avn
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.23.2.01avn
By analyzing the constitutive role of tour guides narratives, this article addresses the recruitment of tourism as a means of forging transnational ties between diasporans and their ethnic homeland. Combining theoretical frameworks from linguistic anthropology and the sociology of tourism, it examines the narratives told to American Jewish youth at three graves at a military cemetery in Israel and analyzes the discursive, linguistic, and rhetorical strategies in the narratives, including stancetaking, reported speech, and pronominal usage. Attending to the growing phenomenon of diaspora homeland tourism, it analyzes how tour guide narratives about the past work as a form of social action in constituting present day transnational identifications.
Keywords: homeland tourism, socialization, tour guides, youth, Israel, tourism
Cited by (9)
Cited by nine other publications
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Hallett, Richard W.
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