Authentic New Orleans: Tourism, Culture, and Race in the Big Easy

Authentic New Orleans: Tourism, Culture, and Race in the Big Easy

by Kevin Fox Gotham
ISBN-10:
0814731856
ISBN-13:
9780814731857
Pub. Date:
12/01/2007
Publisher:
New York University Press
ISBN-10:
0814731856
ISBN-13:
9780814731857
Pub. Date:
12/01/2007
Publisher:
New York University Press
Authentic New Orleans: Tourism, Culture, and Race in the Big Easy

Authentic New Orleans: Tourism, Culture, and Race in the Big Easy

by Kevin Fox Gotham

Hardcover

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Overview

Honorable Mention for the 2008 Robert Park Outstanding Book Award given by the ASA’s Community and Urban Sociology Section
Mardi Gras, jazz, voodoo, gumbo, Bourbon Street, the French Quarter—all evoke that place that is unlike any other: New Orleans. In Authentic New Orleans, Kevin Fox Gotham explains how New Orleans became a tourist town, a spectacular locale known as much for its excesses as for its quirky Southern charm.
Gotham begins in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina amid the whirlwind of speculation about the rebuilding of the city and the dread of outsiders wiping New Orleans clean of the grit that made it great. He continues with the origins of Carnival and the Mardi Gras celebration in the nineteenth century, showing how, through careful planning and promotion, the city constructed itself as a major tourist attraction. By examining various image-building campaigns and promotional strategies to disseminate a palatable image of New Orleans on a national scale Gotham ultimately establishes New Orleans as one of the originators of the mass tourism industry—which linked leisure to travel, promoted international expositions, and developed the concept of pleasure travel.
Gotham shows how New Orleans was able to become one of the most popular tourist attractions in the United States, especially through the transformation of Mardi Gras into a national, even international, event. All the while Gotham is concerned with showing the difference between tourism from above and tourism from below—that is, how New Orleans’ distinctiveness is both maximized, some might say exploited, to serve the global economy of tourism as well as how local groups and individuals use tourism to preserve and anchor longstanding communal traditions.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814731857
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 12/01/2007
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.81(d)

About the Author

Kevin Fox Gotham is Associate Professor of Sociology at Tulane University. He is the author of Race, Real Estate, and Uneven Development: The Kansas City Experience, 1900-2000 and the editor of Critical Perspectives on Urban Redevelopment.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Tracking the Tear
1 Moments More Concentrated than Hours: Grief and the Textures of Time
2 Evocations: The Romance of Indian Lament
3 Securing Time: Maternal Melancholia and Sentimental Domesticity
4 Slavery’s Ruins and the Countermonumental Impulse
5 Representative Mournfulness: Nation and Race in the Time of Lincoln
Coda: Everyday Grief
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
About the Author

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Most of us probably do not think of sociologists as historians, but Kevin Fox Gotham, associate professor of sociology at Tulane University, shows us what is to be gained by bringing those two disciplines and their diverse methods of analyses together in productive counterpoint. Gotham's use of a post-hurricane Katrina frame for considering tourism and New Orleans provides an accessible lead-in for most readers, but the historical depth of his study enables him to offer significant theoretical contributions to our ways of thinking about the relationships among "race," tourism, and place, over time.”
-American Journal of Sociology

,

Authentic New Orleans is a convincing and productive work, which will be fruitful for further research on gentrification within urban studies.”
-Thomas Doerfler,University of Bayreuth

"Gotham succeeds most clearly in offering a fresh interpretation of the 1884 World's Industrial and Cotton Centennial Exposition and in capturing the complexity of New Orleanians' attitudes about "authenticity" at different moments in the city's history. He also offers a compelling analysis enlivened with colorful details, especially for the mid- to late nineteenth century and the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. His work deserves historians' attention for emphatically rejecting one-dimensional, theory-driven analyses that fail to capture the diversity of human agency."-The Journal of Southern History,

“A seminal social and economic history of tourism and travel promotion in New Orleans, covering nearly two centuries from the early 1800s to the present. Authentic New Orleans should instantly become a standard case history in the sociology of tourism.”
-John Hannigan,author of Fantasy City: Pleasure and Profit in the Postmodern Metropolis

“In this remarkable book, Kevin Fox Gotham combines careful historical research, vivid ethnographic observation and sophisticated theoretical insight to produce an indispensable account of New Orleans’ tourist economy, from its earliest origins to the eve of Hurricane Katrina. A major achievement.”
-Richard Douglas Lloyd,author of Neo-Bohemia: Art and Commerce in the Postindustrial City

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