DECONSTRUCTING TOURISM UNFAMILIAR HISTORIES AND ALTERNATIVE FUTURES OF TOURISM

by Sohail Inayatullah

Deconstruction

This article attempts to deconstruct tourism. We are not concerned with providing with data or giving projections, rather our task is to make the underlying scheme--the boundaries of knowledge that make the idea of tourism intelligible--problematic.

We seek then to disturb our normal notions of what it means to be a tourist, we do not seek to give yet another plan, a list of policy implications that are to be debated, rather the effort is to take a step back and a step forward. By moving through time, we hope to make the present less familiar, to take it out of its essentialized, concrete quality and perhaps make it somewhat liminal--to make it less frozen, less impossible to change. We seek then to transform the present.

Our move into history then is to make present notions of tourism peculiar, not universal. Our move into the future is to distance ourselves from the present, to see the present afresh in light of what can be. These futures, while derived through various methodologies, are important not because they might happen but how they force to reconsider the present. This is especially important as we have been in the 15th century for over 12 years now (within the framework of Islamic temporal dynamics), and already the freshness of the future has become stale.

 

The Traveller/Pilgrim

Staying within Islamic perceptions of travel and time, perhaps the best classical tales of tourism are the accounts of Ibn Battuta, Travels in Asia and Africa: 1325--1354. There was no tourist then but there were travellers or pilgrims. Within this world, the Islamic world, all muslims had to travel, they had to make the pilgrimage to Mecca. Indeed, travel or the accumulation of wisdom was the essence of islam. Traveling, visiting wise people, finding holy sites, was an integral part of life. "The pilgrim on his journey travelled in a caravan whose numbers increased at ever stage. He found all arrangements made for his marches and his halts (what we now call the travel agent), and if the road lay through dangerous country (that is bad food and rude visa officers), his caravan was protected by an escort of soldiers (immigration personnel and information booths). In all large centers as well as many intermediate stations were rest houses and hospices where he was hospitably welcomed and entertained out of endowments created by generations of benefactors (Battuta, 4)." There was then an ecology of travel, where previous generations took care of future ones. While "this was the lot of every pilgrim, the [wise person] received still great consideration" (5). Islam then provided an incentive to travel unknown in any other age or community--as it was said, "my house is your house." Of course the Hawaiians had a similar system but the response by the West was "your house is my house, and get out, this is my house!"

Travel then was about learning differences. In Ceylon, the idolaters (the Buddhists) served him rice on banana leaves and leftovers were eaten by the dogs and birds. However, "if any child, who had not reached the age of reason, ate any of it, they would beat him, and make him eat cow dung, this being, as they say, the purification for the act" (94).

While in Turkey, Ibn Battuta, met the Christian emperor George, who after being satisfied that Ibn Battuta knew something about the holy land, was given a robe of honor. "They have a custom that anyone who wears the king's robe of honor and rides his horse is paraded round with trumpets, fifes and drums, so that the people may see him (157)."

This was then an era where the Idea of the transcendental was supreme, where there was an integrated code of ethics--a clear sense of the self, a clear sense of the text which gave the world meaning, and a clear sense of what happened if one did not fit into the system. The self travelled to gain spiritual knowledge. The traveler, poor or rich was respected, since traveling was fraught with difficulties. Traveling indeed was isomorphic with the spiritual journey of the Self.

Of course today in Mecca, the planner has entered. In an attempt to make the pilgrimage more efficient--the long walk between religious sites--a huge highway was installed. Instead of increasing efficiency, the highway is now flooded with buses and cars, making it still easier to walk.

Moreover the idea that travel itself leads to the broadening of the mind is not so certain. As R.J. Scott has argued in his paper titled, "The Development of Tourism in Fiji since 1923,"

 

"Today, travel, far from broadening the mind is actually contriving to shrink it. Along with the benefits of efficiency and labor saving that the package tour concept has brought, with it comes the concomitant danger of stultifying sameness. As our people in Fiji go about their daily task of serving the visitors we see an endless succession of the same little old ladies, with the same blue hair rinses, spending the same life insurance money and speaking in the same accents of the same things which have penetrated their similar perceptions. And what of little old ladies? As they climb in and out of their same cars, their same planes, their same hotel beds, as they eat the same foods, drink the same drinks and buy the same souvenirs is it to be wondered that many cannot tell form one day to the next which country it is they presently visiting? These people travel the world like registered parcels, blindly unaware of the local populations, their aspirations, problems and tragedies. Instead of promoting mutual understanding they promote mutual contempt (212).

Who Are Today's Tourists?

Today's tourists are the merchants--the business class in search of the deal. Travel for them is the perfect hotel and relaxation afterwards--sex and alcohol. They are the warriors--the military bases with relaxation not nightly but during R&R periods-- Bangkok and Manila reflect that social practice. They are the intellectuals--going from conference from conference, creating conference culture, taking photos of progressive spots, sometimes in search of spiritual adventure, but often in search of the Other that their own culture cannot provide. And last of all they are the middle-class and workers--mass tourism. They travel to forget their daily lives.

 

The Cultural Division Of Tourism

What then is the larger framework to understand the present of tourism? Just as there is a global division of labor, there is also a global division of tourism, Asian nations provide raw materials in the form of the environment (jungle and beaches, although this because of environmental crises is becoming less available) and raw bodies (in terms of prostitution and the erotic although this too is becoming problematic because of AIDS) and most importantly they provide premodern culture (which again is becoming less available because of the homogenization of global culture). The premodern is necessary for the West as it provides evidence of Western superiority, of the linear flow of history from caveman to Cambridge.

The West manufactures rationality creating Asia and Africa as the Other--the land of the exotic and erotic--as the irrational. It exists to be studied by social scientists, changes by international policy experts, and visited by tourists. The West also in search of traditional culture helps transform culture into custom, creating "museumized" cultures where living culture is frozen so as to best present it to the tourist.

The West also manufactures tourism services and the Idea of Tourism itself--this as we showed earlier is not a universal concept but a particular idea by a specific culture. It also provides the high end dimension of tourism, the post modern artificial intended world--Disneyland. While tourists go to Asia to seek the premodern, god and sex, tourists go to the West to seek the future, high technology and postmodernity.

Tourism development or research on tourism policy is merely the effort of nations to move up and down the tourism division change, by for example, having their own airline, reducing leakage of profits, and by reducing the social costs of tourism (eco- tourism, tamed tourism or tourism on our own terms).

Tourism then fundamentally is part of the development paradigm first articulated by Herbert Spencer. Tourism is merely the last and latest effort in becoming rich through appropriating the categories of "women," "labor," "history," "culture," and "environment," and using them to extract surplus value from the periphery to the center.

Developing A Criteria From Which To Evaluate Tourism

But of course many of will disagree, arguing that tourism is necessary for cultural exchange, for jobs, for creating a cosmopolitan city. Maybe, Maybe not. The point for planners and mediators is that we have no consensus on the value of tourism. Is there a criteria from which to judge tourism. I certainly have mine.

1. How does tourism affect the distribution of wealth? Can we develop tourism that increased the wealth of the low. Ideally I would want a ceiling and floor system, with the high not allowed to rise until the floor went up? 2. Does tourism created conditions where economic growth is sustaining that is where there numerous multiplier affects? 3. Does tourism reduce structural violence (poverty, bad health, neurosis caused by the system)? 4. Does tourism reduce personal direct violence? 5. Does tourism create the possibilities for cultural pluralism, that is conditions where one culture understands the categories of the other culture--time, language, relationship to history, family, transcendental, and land? 6. Does tourism help create economic democracy, that is, where employees participate and own the hotels, the buses, the real estate companies, and so forth?

Thus my values are: distribution, growth, structural peace, personal peace, cultural pluralism, and economic democracy.

The Futures Of Tourism

The problem with this criteria is that it assumes that the idea of the tourist will remain stable. But just as Ibn Battuta could not imagine the transformation from traveler/pilgrim to tourist, we cannot imagine new categories that will displace tourism.

Let me give four conservative emerging issues that might help take us out of our present.

1. Virtual Reality

We will soon be able to don a helmet and practice safe travel, safe sex (indeed it is this that will bring computers in our homes in the next century, not banking, nor games, but virtual reality sex). Technology will have finally captured nature--making it obsolete.

Why travel, when reality and imagination are blurred anyway. Traditional tourism was there to forget. Eco-tourism or the sophisticated tourist is in search of more experiences. The Western self is empty, the task is to fill it with cultural, environmental experiences of the other.

The ancient traveler travelled to remember--he or she went to the place that reminded one of one's place in the cosmos. In the virtual self, there is no longer any place, we are all homeless, nor is there any self to hold on to.

 

2. Genetic engineering

. While it will start out quite harmless, all of us want to avoid abnormalities, or various genetic diseases, thus we will all want to be checked by our family genetic engineer. But soon this will lead not to disease prevention but capacity enhancement. Intelligence, memory, body type and beauty will be open for discussion. Birthing will eventually be managed by State factories and we will be the last generation to produce children the old fashioned way. It will be the final victory of the feminists and their final defeat. The biological cycle will have been terminated by technology and women will essentially be not any different than men once their reproductive capabilities become unnecessary.

What will tourism be like in this world? Will they find a tourism gene? Will there be mutant centers we go to visit? Will culture be totally destroyed?

3. World travel and world governance

. The four types of travel have created a narrative in which there is no longer any allegiance to any particular place. This loneliness is resolved not through the search of one place but the realization the planet in itself is home. Tourism is then about moving onward to other planets. A world government with no visa requirements would enhance this possibility. We would all be perpetual immigrants traveling and never fearing deportation.

 

4. Spiritual-Psychic travel

. In this scenario, we travel mentally, like virtual reality, but through enhanced mental powers. Or we check in our body, and our mind travels.

Alternative Futures Of Tourism

Given these emerging trends what are some scenarios of the future.

1. Gradual Growth:

Tourism stays the same but grows. Government and community organizations buffer the negative economic impacts of tourism (through dialog, developer fees, low cost housing, reciprocity), and reduce the negative cultural impacts of tourism (through community development and through "authentic" cultural events).

2. Technological Transformation:

Tourism is transformed through new technologies. Virtual reality, telecommuting, new brain/mind drugs, even spiritual practices lead to decreased travel since one can be home and elsewhere at the same time.

3. Structural and Epistemological changes

: Tourism is transformed as both the structure of tourism (corporate, hierarchical, capital intensive) and the epistemology of tourism (in search of the exotic, fragmented selves in search of wholeness or defeated selves desiring to forget) are transformed Tourism employees participate in the ownership of tourism centers (and thus real aloha), small scale center where the traveler or pilgrim reemerges, and selves expand through cultural interaction and renewal. Tourism volume declines but becomes more enriching for workers and local population. Changes in the inter-state system leads to less reduced national sovereignty (a borderless world for capital and labor) with travel a basic right.

 

4. Tourism Collapse

Environmental crises, depression, violent resistance from local cultures cause tourism to decline.

Within each one of these scenarios we can develop separate criteria for tourism. In a depression, Hawaii for example, might be desperate for any type of money--to becoming the Las Vegas of the pacific to the Bangkok of the Pacific.

Will then the future tourist be the voyager or the eternally homeless or the satisfied homeful?

 

Strategies For Transformation

What we can be sure of then that tourism in the future will be dramatically different from tourism today, just as the tourist of today is dramatically different from the traveller of yesterday. Technology, social relations, the construction of the self all will be quite different in the near future.

In the meantime, we need to develop and find consensus on criteria from which to judge tourism in Hawaii. My criteria focuses on a tourism that (1) enhances distribution of wealth and cultural meanings, (2) that creates conditions for innovative and dynamic growth at local levels, (3) that reduces structural violence, (4) that does not increase personal violence, (5) that leads to authentic cultural encounters where cultures learn how each constructs the other, among other issues this means adopting the categories of the host culture, and (6) that transforms the local political economy to one based on economic democracy--that is the cooperative structure.

Now what about strategies for transformation?

There are many levels to this. First, is supporting alternative community development models of tourism--giving funds and publicity, if they desire it. Second, is working towards an alternative model of culture, knowledge and transactions-- individually, intellectually and through the normal political system. But beyond agency, change comes about through long terms structural changes. These are the long term historical cycles: Sorokin's sensate to ideation, Eisler's patriarchy to matriarchy, Sarkar's four stage of worker, warrior, intellectual, capitalist and then revolution. For there to be an alternative form of tourism, capital and capitalism must be met head on. Impossible at the state level but possible at local levels of resistance and possible at the global level: that is a new world governance system with a new model of economics. While this might be hard to believe, I am reminded of the words of Ibn Khaldun's Muqaddimah

 

"At the end of a dynasty, there often also appears some (show of) power that gives the impression that the senility of the dynasty has been made to disappear. It lights up brilliantly just before it is extinguished, like a burning wick the flame of which leaps up brilliantly a moment before it goes out, giving the impression it is just starting to burn, when in fact it is going out." (246)

We should expect the fantastic and be ready to create it

References

Ibn Battuta, Travels in Asia and Africa: 1325--1354. London, Talk & D Paul, 1929. Ibn Khaldun's Muqaddimah ed. N.J. Dawood, trans. Franz Rosenthal. New Jersey, Princeton, 1967. R.J. Scott, "The Development of Tourism in Fiji since 1923," Suva, Fiji Visitor's Bureau, 1970. See also Sinoe Tupouniua, Ron Crocombe, Claire Slatter, The Pacific Way. Suva, South Pacific Social Sciences Association, 1975. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- This is a draft of a panel speech given to the annual meeting of the Hawaii chapter of the American Planning Association at Tokai University, Honolulu, Hawaii. April 20, 1993. Forthcoming books include Alternative Futures for South Asia and Macrohistory and Macrohistorians.

Home | Back to Contents