Handbook on Food Tourism
Handbook on Food Tourism
Kim, Sangkyun; Park, Eerang
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
03/2024
328
Dura
Inglês
9781803924168
15 a 20 dias
Foreword xii
1 Introduction: the endless journey through our imagined curiosities, our
tasteful stories 1
Eerang Park and Sangkyun Kim
PART I (RE)THINKING AND (RE)EVALUATING FOOD TOURISM
2 Festivals as culinary tourism destinations and attractions 18
Lucy M. Long
3 Building an imagined sense of place and resurrecting memories with
food tourism 33
Sally Everett
4 Characteristics of place for food destinations: a foodscape perspective 48
Andy Widyanta and Eerang Park
5 Zorba's kitchen: consuming Greekness in tourist-oriented restaurants in Greece 61
Michal Rozanis and Nir Avieli
6 Food for thought: tourism, eating and the consequences of everyday decisions 73
Tracy Berno
7 There's no place like food: instant noodles, instant elsew(here) 86
Desmond Wee
PART II FOOD TOURISM DEVELOPMENT AND STAKEHOLDERS
8 The notion of local in rural food tourism: insights from the Swedish context 103
Josefine OEstrup Backe
9 Regenerative practices and the local turn: food tourism in rural regional context 117
Maree Gerke, Can-Seng Ooi and Heidi Dahles
10 Cultural innovation of chefs and food tourism development: the case of
South Africa 133
Hennie Fisher and Gerrie du Rand
11 Rethinking the importance of food tourism to destination sustainability:
a supply-side discussion of noodle experiences in Suzhou 150
Denian Cheng, Joanna Fountain, Christopher Rosin and Xiaomeng Lucock
PART III TRENDS, INNOVATIONS, AND NEW FOOD TOURISM
ATTRACTIONS
12 The homeland of Sanuki udon: unconsolidated placemaking processes
in a food tourism destination 167
Kyungjae Jang, Sangkyun Kim and Timo Thelen
13 From a newspaper page to a must-visit food tourism attraction 182
Francesc Fuste-Forne
14 Novelty experiences as food tourism attractions in Japan 194
David J. Telfer and Atsuko Hashimoto
15 From watching to eating: food tourism perspectives on Japan's ama
divers and their catches 209
Timo Thelen
16 Learning to eat and eating to learn: unpacking co-created tourism
experiences at a wild food festival 226
Ingrid Kajzer Mitchell and Will Low
17 Evaluating the value creation of memorable or extraordinary
gastronomic tourism experiences: a case study approach 244
Paul Strickland and Kim M. Williams
PART IV PROSPECTS AND OUTLOOKS FOR NEXT GENERATION
OF FOOD TOURISM
18 Food taste experiences and gastrophysics: gender matters? 259
Sangkyun Kim, Min Xu and Eerang Park
19 Adapting the luxury gastronomic experience to the new post-crisis
scenario from a resilience approach 272
Rocio Gonzalez-Sanchez, Sara Alonso-Munoz, Maria Torrejon-Ramos,
Fernando E. Garcia-Muina and Maria-Sonia Medina-Salgado
20 What we know of food tourism: systematic review of the literature
using informetric analysis and directions for future research 288
Eerang Park, Sangkyun Kim and Anton Klarin
Index 307
Foreword xii
1 Introduction: the endless journey through our imagined curiosities, our
tasteful stories 1
Eerang Park and Sangkyun Kim
PART I (RE)THINKING AND (RE)EVALUATING FOOD TOURISM
2 Festivals as culinary tourism destinations and attractions 18
Lucy M. Long
3 Building an imagined sense of place and resurrecting memories with
food tourism 33
Sally Everett
4 Characteristics of place for food destinations: a foodscape perspective 48
Andy Widyanta and Eerang Park
5 Zorba's kitchen: consuming Greekness in tourist-oriented restaurants in Greece 61
Michal Rozanis and Nir Avieli
6 Food for thought: tourism, eating and the consequences of everyday decisions 73
Tracy Berno
7 There's no place like food: instant noodles, instant elsew(here) 86
Desmond Wee
PART II FOOD TOURISM DEVELOPMENT AND STAKEHOLDERS
8 The notion of local in rural food tourism: insights from the Swedish context 103
Josefine OEstrup Backe
9 Regenerative practices and the local turn: food tourism in rural regional context 117
Maree Gerke, Can-Seng Ooi and Heidi Dahles
10 Cultural innovation of chefs and food tourism development: the case of
South Africa 133
Hennie Fisher and Gerrie du Rand
11 Rethinking the importance of food tourism to destination sustainability:
a supply-side discussion of noodle experiences in Suzhou 150
Denian Cheng, Joanna Fountain, Christopher Rosin and Xiaomeng Lucock
PART III TRENDS, INNOVATIONS, AND NEW FOOD TOURISM
ATTRACTIONS
12 The homeland of Sanuki udon: unconsolidated placemaking processes
in a food tourism destination 167
Kyungjae Jang, Sangkyun Kim and Timo Thelen
13 From a newspaper page to a must-visit food tourism attraction 182
Francesc Fuste-Forne
14 Novelty experiences as food tourism attractions in Japan 194
David J. Telfer and Atsuko Hashimoto
15 From watching to eating: food tourism perspectives on Japan's ama
divers and their catches 209
Timo Thelen
16 Learning to eat and eating to learn: unpacking co-created tourism
experiences at a wild food festival 226
Ingrid Kajzer Mitchell and Will Low
17 Evaluating the value creation of memorable or extraordinary
gastronomic tourism experiences: a case study approach 244
Paul Strickland and Kim M. Williams
PART IV PROSPECTS AND OUTLOOKS FOR NEXT GENERATION
OF FOOD TOURISM
18 Food taste experiences and gastrophysics: gender matters? 259
Sangkyun Kim, Min Xu and Eerang Park
19 Adapting the luxury gastronomic experience to the new post-crisis
scenario from a resilience approach 272
Rocio Gonzalez-Sanchez, Sara Alonso-Munoz, Maria Torrejon-Ramos,
Fernando E. Garcia-Muina and Maria-Sonia Medina-Salgado
20 What we know of food tourism: systematic review of the literature
using informetric analysis and directions for future research 288
Eerang Park, Sangkyun Kim and Anton Klarin
Index 307