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Stuck with Tourism: Space, Power, and Labor in Contemporary Yucatan

Stuck with Tourism: Space, Power, and Labor in Contemporary Yucatan

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  • Matilde C�rdoba Azc�rate
  • University of California Press
  • Paperback
  • 9780520344495
  • 8.9 X 6 X 0.8 inches
  • 0.9 pounds
  • Social Science > Anthropology - Cultural & Social
  • English
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Book Description

Tourism has become one of the most powerful forces organizing the predatory geographies of late capitalism. It creates entangled futures of exploitation and dependence, extracting resources and labor, and eclipsing other ways of doing, living, and imagining life. And yet, tourism also creates jobs, encourages infrastructure development, and in many places inspires the only possibility of hope and well-being. Stuck with Tourism explores the ambivalent nature of tourism by drawing on ethnographic evidence from the Mexican Yucat�n Peninsula, a region voraciously transformed by tourism development over the past forty years. Contrasting labor and lived experiences at the beach resorts of Canc�n, protected natural enclaves along the Gulf coast, historical buildings of the colonial past, and maquilas for souvenir production in the Maya heartland, this book explores the moral, political, ecological, and everyday dilemmas that emerge when, as Yucat�n's inhabitants put it, people get stuck in tourism's grip.
Stuck with Tourism: Space, Power, and Labor in Contemporary Yucatan

Author Bio

I earned my PhD in Sociocultural Anthropology from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (2007), where I also received a B.A in Sociology (2001) , and a B.A and M.As in Social Anthropology (2003, 2005).

Prior to joining the Communication Department as a faculty member, I have worked as an Assistant Professor, Anthropology Department, Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM) (2007-2013); a Fulbright Post-doctoral Fellow at the Earth and Environmental Sciences Program and The Center for Place, Culture and Politics at The Graduate Center, City University of New York (CUNY) (2010-2012); and more recently, as a Lecturer at the Department of Communication and a Research Fellow at The Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies, University of California, San Diego (2013-2016).

I am the author of one co-authored monograph, a small book on nature tourism in Yucatan, and more than a dozen peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters examining processes of spatial enclosure, the politics of heritage, tourism (im)mobilities, and the contested nature of hegemonic and alternative tourism imaginaries.

My research has been funded by The Fulbright Postdoctoral Program (2010-12); The Institute for Science, Innovation and Society, University of Oxford (2010-2011); The National Plan for Research and Development, Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain (2004-2008; 2008-2011; 2012-2015) and more recently, the UC San Diego’s Non-Senate Faculty Development Awards (2015; 2016).

My teaching interests include critical globalization; cultural industries and consumer cultures; tourism as a social form; the ideology and production of nature; capitalism and its ecologies; ethnographic methods. Currently I am part of the editorial boards of Revista de Antropología Social, the Journal Transfers: an interdisciplinary journal on mobility studies, and Etnográfica.

Research Interests 

My research uses a political ecology approach and ethnographic perspective to understand the relations between tourism, space and capitalism. I work across the fields of social and urban anthropology, critical geography, development and tourism studies.

My book Stuck With Tourism: Space, Power and Labor in Contemporary Yucatán (UC Press 2020) examines the socio-spatial and economic restructuring brought about by the implementation of tourism as a state development tool in the Mexican Yucatan Peninsula since the mid 1970s. The manuscript builds on extensive ethnographic research on mainstream and alternative forms of tourism development in the region and it is informed by multi-sited, global and mobile ethnography approaches.

Recently I have co-edited the volume Tourism Geopolitics (University of Arizona Press, forthcoming 2021) which aims to expand discussions around the politics of tourism and the ways in which tourism becomes a political and politicized tool in processes of statecraft, territorial expansion, sovereignty disputes, border migration and infrastructural expansion around the world. I see this project as the beginning of a larger project on the ways in which service-oriented infrastructure developments, such as Train Maya in Yucatán, are used in the name of redistributive and emancipatory politics. 

 

Source: University of California San Diego 

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