Consumer Behavior in Tourism and Hospitality Research

Alain Decrop|Arch G. Woodside
Emerald
Emerald

This book can be opened with

Glassboxx eBooks and audiobooks can be opened on phones, tablets, iOS and Android devices

Hardback
9781787146914
09 August 2017
£82.99
eBook (PDF)
9781787146907
09 August 2017
£82.99
eBook (ePub)
9781787430075
09 August 2017
£82.99

Note on our eBooks and Audiobooks: you can read our eBooks (ePUB or PDF) and listen to audiobooks on the free Emerald Books app on iOS, Android, and desktop. Or read and listen on Emerald's online reader (ePUB eBooks and audiobooks only). To purchase a digital book you will need to create an account if you don’t already have one. After purchasing you will receive instructions on how to get started.

  • Description
  • Contents
  • Reviews
This portrait of contemporary tourists proposes that these travelers create consumption audio-portraits and self-explanations (identity constructions) through their purchases and use of travel-related services. Their configurations of destinations, accommodations, travel modes, in-route and destination activities, meal choices, sites/attractions visited, and their travel companions inform others and themselves about who they are. These understandings of self through travel are statements of being—where I’ve been and what I’ve done tells me and others who I am. Also, one’s definition of self (being) affects tourists’ future configurations of travel-related buying and consumption. Thus, tourism-related behavior and being represent virtuous and sometimes vicious consumption systems. Consequently, most tourists are identifiable by who they are and what they know about where they have been and what they have done via their summaries of their trips. The chapters in this volume provide tools and evidence useful for deep understanding of tourists’ buying, consumption, and being through examinations of consumers’ self-descriptions of personal markers of their trip configurations. This volume’s core tenet is that thick descriptions and case-based models are essential steps for highly useful research and deep understanding of tourism behavior.

PREFACE; Alain Decrop and Arch G. Woodside  WHAT CAN TOURISTS AND TRAVEL ADVISORS LEARN FROM CHOICE OVERLOAD RESEARCH?; Nguyen T. Thai and Ulku Yuksel  FROM TOURISM DESTINATION TO MUNDAE CONSUMPTION OF PLACE: AN ASIAN INTROSPECTION OF FRANCE; Wided Batat and Sakal Phou  RUSSIAN WOMEN TRAVELING: A SOCIO-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE; Ekaterina Miettinen  GENDER, AGE, AND EDUCATION EFFECTS ON TRAVEL-RELATED BEHAVIOR: REPORTS ON FACEBOOK; Sanja Božić and Tamara Jovanović  THE GAZE AND OBJECTIVES OF TOWNSCAPE VISITORS; Taketo Naoi, Akira Soshiroda, and Shoji Iijima  EXPERIENTIAL CONTEXT AND ACTUAL EXPERIENCES IN PROTECTED NATURAL PARKS: COMPARING FRANCE VERSUS TAIWAN; Anne-Marie Lebrun, Che-Jen Su, Lhéraud Jean-Luc, Marsac Antoine, Bouchet Patrick  REDIRECTION THEORY AND ANTI-SOCIAL TRAVEL BEHAVIOR: CONFIGURAL ANTECEDENTS TO NASCENT ROAD-ROAD SIGNALING; Laura Herbst, Dominik Reinartz, and Arch Woodside  SOLVING THE CORE THEORETICAL ISSUES IN CONSUMER BEHAVIOR IN TOURISM; Arch G. Woodside

    In these papers from the 2015 Consumer Psychology of Tourism, Hospitality, and Leisure Symposium, international contributors provide tools for understanding tourism-related behavior and consumption cycles. As a whole, the book demonstrates that detailed descriptions and case-based models are better methods for researching tourism behavior. Emphasis is on the tourism consumer’s understanding of self and identity through travel choices such as destinations, means of transportation, accommodations, meals, sites visited, activities, and purchase of travel-related services. Some specific subjects examined include choice overload research, Russian women travelers, and travel-related behavior on Facebook. B&W charts and screenshots are included.

    - Annotation ©2017