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Sugar Heritage and Tourism in Transition
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Contributors Part 1: Introduction 1 Connecting Sugar Heritage and Tourism - Lee Jolliffe Part 2: Perspectives from Sugar Producing Countries 2 Tourism Potential at the Origins of Sugar Production - Linda Joyce Forristal 3 Sugar-Related Tourism In Australia: An Historical Perspective - Peter D. Griggs 4 Brazil's Sugar Heritage and Tourism - From Engenhos to Cachaca - Angela Cabral Flecha and Linda Joyce Forristal Part 3: Perspectives from Countries Transitioning from Sugar to Tourism 5 The Industrial Heritage of Sugar at World Heritage Sites in the Caribbean - Tara A. Inniss and Lee Jolliffe 6 Incorporating Sugar Heritage Resources into Tourism in St. Kitts - Rachel Dodds and Lee Jolliffe 7 The Contested Heritage of Sugar and Slavery at Tourism Attractions in Barbados and St. Lucia - Mechelle N. Best and Winston Phulgence 8 Transforming Taiwan's Sugar Refineries for Leisure and Tourism - Abby Liu Part 4: Consuming Sugar and its Heritage 9 Sugar in Tourism: 'Wrapped in Devonshire sunshine' - Paul Cleave 10 Sugar Cane and the Sugar Train: Linking Tradition, Trade and Tourism in Tropical North Queensland - Leanne White 11 From Sugar as Industry to Sugar as Heritage: Changing Perceptions of the Chelsea Sugar Works - Jane Legget 12 Exhibiting and Interpreting Sugar Heritage in the World's Museums - Lee Jolliffe Part 5: Conclusion 13 Directions in Sugar Heritage Tourism - Lee Jolliffe

About the Author

Lee Jolliffe is a Professor of Hospitality and Tourism, University of New Brunswick, Canada. With a museum studies and tourism background, her research interests include studying how culinary heritage and tourism intersect. Recent publications include the edited volume Sugar Heritage and Tourism in Transition (Channel View Publications, 2013) and the co-authored volume (Hilary du Cros and Lee Jolliffe) The Arts and Events (Routledge, 2014).

Reviews

This fascinating book delves into another element of heritage that has not been adequately examined by tourism scholars. Its coverage of sugar and all that sugar production entails as forms of heritage is extraordinary and commendable. The work is a valuable contribution to the burgeoning scholarly theme of 'heritage of the ordinary', and its chapters are loaded with decisive discourses on globalization, slavery, colonialism, social inequities, collective amnesia, place identity, and contested heritages, to name but a few conceptual pearls. Its worldwide perspectives and strong conceptual grounding make Sugar Heritage and Tourism in Transition essential reading for heritage and tourism scholars everywhere. Professor Dallen J. Timothy, Arizona State University, USA In thematically-linked and interdisciplinary essays, Sugar Heritage and Tourism in Transition offers a comprehensive, thoughtful and sensitive overview of the challenges confronting former sugarcane producers as they convert to tourism-based economies and strive to attract tourists by focusing on their nations' sugar heritage, including slavery and indentureship, without compromising its authenticity. Elizabeth Abbott, Trinity College, University of Toronto, Canada The book's eleven substantial chapters are uniformly well-written and well-researched, with substantial bibliographies and numerous useful tables and figures. -- Paul F. Wilkinson, York University, Canada in Island Studies Journal, Vol. 8, No. 1, 2013, pp. 179-206 [This book] will be welcomed by readers of all profiles whose eyes it will open to one of the latest tourism trends, and who will enjoy its clear and direct style of writing and many clearly illustrated points. -- Nikola D. Vuksanovic', University of Novi Sad, Serbia in Annals of Tourism Research 42 (2013) 443-453 This book makes informative reading for all those interested in culinary, industrial, and heritage tourism and how all things are connected. It is this 'connective' aspect that sets it apart from many of the edited books that are marketed each year. It provides the reader with opportunities to see tourism from new and novel perspectives. Well worth a read. -- Keith Dewar, University of New Brunswick - Saint John, Canada in Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change, 2013

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