LT5091 - Cultural Tourism Management (2024/25)
Module specification | Module approved to run in 2024/25 | ||||||||||
Module title | Cultural Tourism Management | ||||||||||
Module level | Intermediate (05) | ||||||||||
Credit rating for module | 15 | ||||||||||
School | Guildhall School of Business and Law | ||||||||||
Total study hours | 150 | ||||||||||
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Assessment components |
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Running in 2024/25(Please note that module timeslots are subject to change) |
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Module summary
International tourist arrivals reached 1.5bn in 2019 and the proportion of these said to be cultural tourists is 40% and rising. Many more are incidental cultural tourists, engaging with culture on a more casual level. Most governments have specific cultural tourism strategies and are looking to develop their cultural tourism offer and find new ways of communicating that to potential visitors. Cultural Tourism Management explores the growth and increasing diversity of this cultural tourism market, and the governance of cultural tourism at different spatial levels from the global to the local. It examines critical issues related to the cultural tourism product including tangible and intangible cultural heritage, contemporary culture, contested meanings, authenticity, identity and the commodification of culture. It identifies the current trends in creative and experiential tourism and how this impacts communities. It considers the ways in which many cities have reinvented themselves as centres of leisure and recreation consumption using cultural infrastructure investment, heritage commodification, events and festivals to boost cultural and creative industry investment and the potential for cultural tourism.
This module is a core for BA Tourism and Travel Management students and an option for BA Events Management, and BA Events and Marketing students. As such it provides an understanding of the key role that tourism plays in the cultural and creative industries, how culture is turned into tourism products and how destinations attempt to package those products for the growing cultural tourism market.
This module aims to:
- Equip students with a basic understanding of the interplay of culture and tourism, the motivations of cultural tourists and trends in their patterns of consumption and the cultural tourism product
- Demonstrate how the arts, museums, galleries, heritage sector, contemporary and local cultures are mobilised for the leisure economy and international tourism
- Increase awareness of the sensitive issues surrounding the commodification of culture
- Provide an understanding of the practical problems of ‘managing’ cultural tourism in dynamic urban and semi-urban contexts
- Develop skills in practical research, observation, creative thinking, fieldwork. recording and communicating findings
Syllabus
- Defining cultural tourism and the cultural tourist LO1
- From UNESCO to local partnerships – the key institutions and agencies and their role in managing cultural tourism LO1
- Commodifying the past – tangible and intangible cultural heritage, contested heritage, social memory and commemoration LO2
- Ethnoscapes, identity, the commodification of the everyday, authenticity, the invention of tradition LO2
- The contemporary cultural and creative sector as a tourism product LO3
- Analysing tourism landscapes LO4
Balance of independent study and scheduled teaching activity
This module comprises weekly lectures delivered by the module tutor followed by seminar sessions to develop, explore and apply the ideas developed in the lectures. Group and individual tasks in class will give student the opportunity to work with the key concepts developed in the module. The seminars will also be used to support students in the development of their assignment task (the photo essay).
A group exercise takes place in week 4 when student explore a London tourism landscape and record their observations photographically. This forms the basis of an informal presentation analysing the landscape. The exercise is aimed to develop skills required for the photo-essay assignment.
The module also makes use of the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) in order to post material from the lectures, and supply additional teaching material.
Learning outcomes
On successful completion of the module you should be able to:
- Identify the ways in which cultural tourism is managed at different geographical scales (LO1)
- Demonstrate an understanding of the concepts and theories underpinning contemporary cultural and creative tourism (LO2)
- Explain how cultural tourism functions in local tourism landscapes (LO3)
- Select, plan and manage field research in a tourism landscape (LO4)
Bibliography
Core reading:
Smith M.K. (2016) Issues in cultural tourism studies, London: Routledge 3rd edition.
Smith M, Macleod N, Robertson M H (2010) Key concepts in tourist studies, London: Sage
Additional Reading:
Coehn A, Knifton R. (eds) (2015) Sites of popular music heritage: memories, histories, places London: Routledge
Du Cros H., and McKercher B. (2015) Cultural Tourism, Abingdon: Routledge
Hobsbawm E and Ranger T (2012) The invention of tradition, Cambridge, CUP
McKerchler B, du Cross H (2002) Cultural tourism: the partnership between tourism and cultural heritage management, New York: Haworth Hospitality
Prebensen N.K., Chen J.S., and Uysal M. (eds), (2016) Creating Experience Value in Tourism CABI
Raj R., Griffen K., Morpeth N. (eds) (2013) Cultural tourism Wallingford: CABI
Smith L and Akagawa N (2009) Intangible heritage London: Routledge
Timothy D.J. and Boyd S.W. (2003) Heritage tourism, Prentice Hall
Timothy D.J. and Boyd S.W. (2014) Tourism and trails – cultural, ecological and management issues, Channel View Publications
Urry J and Larson J (2012) The tourist gaze 3.0, London: Sage