John Dodd and Veena Sharma (eds.)

The essays on tourism make a critical evaluation of both the enhancing and the deleterious facets of this popular leisure form, as they examine how traditional ways of life are turned into sites for both a deeper understanding of different cultures and for the benefit of voyeurs. An interesting aspect of the book is an exploration of how certain pilgrimage sites have turned into touristic spaces for reconciliation and interaction between the erstwhile exploiter and the exploited.
The essays in this book expressing leisure practices from all continents of the world ably incorporate theoretical perspectives that underpin those practices.
John Dodd has been engaged with leisure studies since the late 1980s. He has spent several years at the University of Technology, Sydney, lecturing in the Leisure, Sport and Tourism Department. In recent years he has been teaching at the National Institute of Sports Studies, University of Canberra where he is Associate Dean (Education) in the Faculty of Health. His research interests range from the motivations of men to engage in Masters/Veterans sport through life-cycle stages to the study of male leisure repertoires before and after midlife. More recently, he has turned his attention to Australian traditional culture examining leisure and sport practice. Veena Sharma is currently a Fellow at the Indian Institute of Advanced Study, Shimla, India where she is engaged in a comparative study of two spiritual traditions—the Vedantic from India and the Akan from Ghana, West Africa. She lectured regularly on leisure as seen through the Vedantic perspective at the WICE, International Centre for Excellence in Leisure Studies, Wageningen, Netherlands for more than ten years. She has also presented several papers on different aspects of Leisure and Vedanta at various World Leisure Conferences and has contributed numerous research papers to international journals on leisure studies.
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