Elite mobilities: the semiotic landscapes of luxury and privilege |
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Authors: | Crispin Thurlow Adam Jaworski |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Interdisciplinary Arts &2. Sciences , University of Washington thurlow@uw.edu;4. Centre for Language &5. Communication , Cardiff University , UK |
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Abstract: | Tourism is immensely powerful in (re)organising large-scale inequalities and privileges. In the rapid expansion of ‘luxury tourism’ we find a wing of this truly global culture industry openly committed to the symbolic production of elite status, distinction and privilege. Our visual essay here offers a series of multimodal, multi-voiced statements arising from a research project that explores and critiques the lavish semiotic economies and strict interactional orders of these ‘new’ elite mobilities. Mimicking the fleeting encounters of super-elite travellers themselves, we undertook a series of ethnographically grounded but patently frugal sorties into five different spaces (or modes) of luxury travel. Drawing on our own fieldwork material and quoting the visual rhetoric of advertisers, we trace the normative production of an ostensibly enclavic landscape that imagines (or re-imagines) limitless aspirations and unbounded pleasures for all consumer-citizens regardless of their power or wealth. |
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Keywords: | elitism luxury tourism class symbolic capital space/place |
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