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RSS: #antitourisme

#antitourisme

  • @cdb_77
    CDB_77 @cdb_77 3/11/2025
    4
    @biggrizzly
    @vazi
    @reka
    @inadvertance
    4
    @fil

    Sick of Feeling Like a Tourist? There’s a Tour for That

    With visitors increasingly interested in the social and political realities of global tourist hot spots, some local guides are adapting their offerings.

    I arrived in Athens for the first time last May with visions of alabaster architecture and picturesque avenues. But when I arrived in Petralona, the central neighborhood where I was staying, I found vacant storefronts, broken sidewalks and crumbling, graffiti-covered buildings.

    The more I explored, the more I wondered why parts of this ancient city had come to convey urban decay rather than classical charm.

    A tour of the Acropolis would most likely not provide answers. Searching on Airbnb Experiences for something more relevant, I found the Athens Social and Political Walk. Its tagline: “How did the ‘cradle of democracy’ become the ‘basket case of Europe’?” I signed up for a similar tour offered by the guide.

    I met the guide, a 35-year-old Spanish-born political scientist named Isaac Caballero Suey, and five other participants near bustling Omonoia Square. Mr. Suey, who had close-cropped hair and glasses, started off by explaining that contemporary Athens has almost nothing in common with the Ancient Greece of Aristotle. These days the city is a petri dish for pretty much every major postmillennial social ill — gentrification, wealth disparity, refugee and immigrant crises, and infrastructure decay.

    With tourism putting pressure on vacation hot spots like Athens, Buenos Aires, Mexico City and Rio de Janeiro, experiences like Mr. Suey’s are drawing curious visitors. They offer a counterpoint to traditional tourism narratives and a way to learn about the tensions affecting the people who actually live in these places.
    Glimpses of an Unseen City

    For three hours, Mr. Suey led us through parts of the city most travelers would ignore or avoid — where abandoned schools and dingy apartments abutted high-rise hotels, and empty arcades concealed vacation rentals.

    He gave us a glimpse of the world inhabited by mostly unseen Athenians, including immigrants and squatters. He connected these locations to issues like corruption, cultural displacement and politics, and shared enlightening stories of grass-roots organizing and mutual aid.

    The tour scrambled my preconceptions, leaving me with an appreciation for Athens as it was rather than as I had imagined it. I wasn’t the only one.

    “The more traditional tourist narratives feel dismissive of the people who live in these places, like they’re not important, and it’s no surprise that places like Athens have struggled to find a modern identity because of this,” said Peter Allen, a 38-year-old software engineer from Liverpool who was also on the tour.

    Mr. Allen, who could be described as a digital nomad, slots into the typical Athens Social and Political Walk demographic, Mr. Suey said: left-leaning frequent travelers, mostly from major cities. “Professors, people of social sciences, politics, economics, but also a lot of tech people,” he explained. “I could even tell you they love the brand Patagonia.”

    Mr. Suey, who also offers tours like Understanding the Refugee Crisis and the Greek LGBTQ History Walk, noted that most bookings are last-minute, suggesting that curious tourists may seek out his distinctive analysis only after they’re exposed to the official “This is Athens” visitors’ guide.

    “My goal is to give you an image of what’s going on in the country, and this is not what tourism boards are interested in,” Mr. Suey said. “I see myself as a political scientist, and what I do is like a documentary.” It is also a business. My tour cost 32 euros, or about $37.

    Encouraged by feedback from participants, he started a company called Planetwonk to bring similar tours to destinations like Buenos Aires, Manila, Mexico City and Rio de Janeiro.

    Beyond ‘Tequila Tours’

    Mr. Suey put me in touch with his partner in Mexico City, a 27-year-old graduate student of art history named Gustavo Sánchez. When he responded to Mr. Suey’s job posting on LinkedIn last year, Mr. Sánchez was working as a traditional, federally credentialed guide doing “tequila tours, very mariachi, very stereotypical,” he said in a phone interview. “Those tours are fun, but if we only do those, we’re exoticizing the country. We’re hiding the problems.”

    Tensions have recently been rising in Mexico City as well-heeled tourists and remote workers have driven up the cost of real estate and food prices, and demonstrations erupted last summer.

    Well versed in Mexico City’s history of corruption and protest, and with Mr. Suey’s guidance, Mr. Sánchez created the Mexico City Social and Political Tour (€34). Mr. Sánchez takes his guests — primarily students, journalists and nonprofit workers — to places like La Merced, the neighborhood that’s home to Mexico City’s largest market and has struggled with government neglect, and Plaza Tlaxcoaque, the site of a former secret prison where dissidents were tortured, which now hosts a large encampment of homeless people.

    “Other guides believe we shouldn’t talk about the bad things happening here. I think that’s unethical,” he said, noting that to his knowledge he’s the only guide in the city leading tours of this type. “I love Mexico City. I’ve studied its history. When you love a place, you can criticize it, because you want it to change.”

    These types of tours offer an alternative to the crowded predictability of social-media-driven tourism, but they existed long before Instagram and its peers. The Catalonian artist and writer Joan Brossa organized a one-night-only “anti-tourism” tour of Barcelona in 1979.

    More recently, in Portugal, Bruno Gomes started We Hate Tourism Tours in 2008, during a painful economic downturn. A skater and surfer, Mr. Gomes used to schlep visiting friends around Lisbon in his van, skipping popular destinations for his personal favorites and planting the seeds of his current company. Today, along with a staff of eight, he offers tours like We Hate Landmarks and Real Life Suburbia, starting at €47 a person. Mr. Gomes and his team still bypass popular sites like the Moorish Castle in Sintra in favor of less-visited alternatives of guides’ choosing.

    “I’m a designer and an artist,” Mr. Gomes said. “My colleague, she’s a journalist. We have an engineer. We have a musician. No one really has anything to do with tourism. We just share what we love.”
    Space for ‘Anti-Tourism’

    Traditional tour operators in Athens and Mexico City don’t seem to mind the competition. Representatives from the nonprofit operator This Is Athens and El Taco Club, a service in Mexico City that employs 80 guides and hosts thousands of guests annually, both used the term “complementary” to describe the nontraditional experience these so-called anti-tourism tours provide.

    The common spirit behind these experiences is an urge toward counterprogramming, but they can diverge in their approach to doing business. In fact, some are not businesses at all.

    Kyle Kajihiro, a University of Hawaii professor of ethnic studies, has spent more than 20 years leading informal tours of Oahu, mostly for friends and colleagues, that challenge the erasure of Native Hawaiians by American colonialism and military expansion. He calls these outings DeTours.

    Dr. Kajihiro does zero marketing for DeTours, nor does he charge for them, and they’re not really targeted at the general public. Instead, when interested people reach out, he screens them to gauge their commitment to Native Hawaiian issues like land rights and food sovereignty. DeTours, he says, are not a commercial venture but rather a way to connect like-minded activists.

    “I think there’s a market for alternatives that are less ethically problematic, that even feel affirming of certain values people have. And there’s a need to have a different kind of story being told,” he said. “But I’m troubled by the way that even good intentions can become a commodified experience.”

    The notion of anti-tourism tours may seem contradictory, but according to Anu Taranath, a faculty member at the University of Washington and the author of “Beyond Guilt Trips: Mindful Travel in an Unequal World,” embracing the full breadth of these tours — from Mr. Suey’s expansive approach to Dr. Kajihiro’s strategic exclusivity — could help drive a necessary shift in travel habits.

    “We need to operate on all levels,” Dr. Taranth said. Anti-tourism “isn’t antithetical to tourism, but our definition of tourism should open up.”

    “None of those are simple conversations to have,” she added, “but I’m seeing people wanting to understand where we are and how we got here, and what it means to do something different.”

    ▻https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/29/travel/athens-mexico-tourism.html
    via @fil
    #anti-tourisme #résistance #villes #urbanisme #airBnB #surtourisme #tourisme_de_masse #urban_matter #Athènes #Buenos_Aires #Mexico_City #Rio_de_Janeiro #alternative #contre-narration #TRUST #master_TRUST

    CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 3/11/2025

      Les #guides alternatives citées dans l’article :

      #planet_wonk :
      ▻https://theplanetwonk.com

      Mexico Social and Political Walk
      ▻https://theplanetwonk.com/st_tour/mexico-social-and-political-walk

      #we_hate_tourism_tours :
      ▻https://wehatetourismtours.com

      Visite sociale et politique d’Athènes
      ▻https://www.airbnb.fr/experiences/1124900?_set_bev_on_new_domain=1762151560_EAYWNmZmU1MTljOW&set_everest_cookie

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 3/11/2025

      Beyond Guilt Trips. Mindful Travel in an Unequal World

      https://btlbooks.com/images/made/images/covers/_resized/9781771134323_800_1066_90.jpg

      Every year, hundreds of thousands of young people pack their bags to study or volunteer abroad. Well-intentioned and curious Westerners—brought up to believe that international travel broadens our horizons—travel to low-income countries to learn about people and cultures different from their own. But while travel abroad can provide much-needed perspective, it can also be deeply unsettling, confusing, and discomforting. Travelers can find themselves unsure about how to think or speak about the differences in race or culture they find, even though these differences might have fueled their desire to travel in the first place. Beyond Guilt Trips helps us to unpack our Western baggage, so that we are better able to understand our uncomfortable feelings about who we are, where we come from, and how much we have. Through engaging personal travel stories and thought-provoking questions about the ethics and politics of our travel, Beyond Guilt Trips shows readers ways to grapple with their discomfort and navigate differences through accountability and connection.

      ▻https://btlbooks.com/book/beyond-guilt-trips
      #livre

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 3/11/2025

      Le blog de l’#antitourisme : Un blog d’archives et d’analyse critique du tourisme et de la #marchandisation du monde

      ▻https://antitourisme38.over-blog.com

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
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  • @cdb_77
    CDB_77 @cdb_77 14/07/2022
    5
    @simplicissimus
    @odilon
    @rastapopoulos
    @colporteur
    @recriweb
    5

    Le numéro 5 de la revue #Nunatak , Revue d’histoires, cultures et #luttes des #montagnes...

    https://revuenunatak.noblogs.org/files/2019/11/Couv-Nunatak5-web.jpg

    ▻https://revuenunatak.noblogs.org/files/2019/11/Nunatak5-HiverPrintemps-2019-2020.pdf
    –—

    métaliste des numéros recensés sur seenthis :
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/926433

    CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 14/07/2022

      Promenons-nous dans les bois. Pendant que le #loup n’y est plus

      https://i.imgur.com/G4GSCBF.png

      Une citation...

      « Contrairement à l’idée qu’a imposée par la suite la bourgeoisie à travers l’histoire officielle, les #lois_Ferry n’avaient pas pour but l’#émancipation des #enfants de prolétaires. Il s’agissait tout au contraire d’en faire de ’#bons_citoyens' capables d’obéir, de comprendre les ordres et de les exécuter ».

      (Ysengrin, 2019/20, p.14)

      #Jules_Ferry #école_publique #école

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 14/07/2022

      Nicole écoute aux portes. Entretien à propos de radios, d’animaux et d’un bout du #Valgaudemar

      https://i.imgur.com/NOIFJd4.png

      #radio #téléphone_portable #tourisme #alpage #vallée_du_VAlgaudemar #bergers #élevage #Les_Portes #exode_rural #pastoralisme #France

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 14/07/2022

      La fin du monde, l’eau et le feu

      https://i.imgur.com/OJFUVhZ.png

      #barrage #Gleno #histoire #barrage_hydro-électrique #Dezzo_di_Colere #énergie #Val_Camonica #Vallée_de_Scalve #Val_Scalve #lac_d'Isao #procès #Virgile_Vigano #La_Ponte_Abiate #justice #Vigano #industrie_textile (#coton) #responsabilité #femmes #injustice #fascisme

      –-> original publié en italien :
      ▻https://nunatak.noblogs.org/post/2018/09/21/nunatak-n-51-52-estate-autunno-2018

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 14/07/2022

      #Transhumances. Une revue saisonnière (1978-1990)

      https://i.imgur.com/tlEvsZO.png

      #saisonniers #tourisme #travailleurs_saisonniers #travail #syndicats #conventions_collectives #grève #histoire #Nuits_Blanches_des_saisonniers #Festival_international_des_saisonniers #culture_touristique #revue

      Une citation :

      « A la fin du XXe siècle, c’étaient les militaires qui sauvaient les migrants, alors que les Piémontais franchissaient des cols de haute altitude à toutes les époques de l’année, partant du pays ou y revenant.
      En #Ubaye, il y avait le lieutenant Trémeau qui était dans un poste militaire. Il appartenait au #CAF, comme beaucoup d’autres militaires. Il avait eu l’idée de construire un #refuge au #col_Sautron, où, si l’on en juge par le registre des décès de la paroisse italienne, au moins soixante-quinze migrants italiens sont morts. Plus près d’ici au #col_Agnel, quand le refuge a été occupé par les militaires dans les années 1890, les soldats voyaient passer des migrants à tout moment. Ils faisaient un peu buvette, moyennant finance. Quand on leur signalait des voyageurs, ils avaient un cor pour appeler, ou alors ils tiraient au fusil pour donner la direction du refuge. Ils ont recueilli des familles entières. Ce côté humain des événements n’empêchait pas, plus au sud, à Marseille notamment, les manifestations xénophobes »

      (propos recueillis par Cyrille, p.43)

      #xénophobie #migrations #frontières #frontière_sud-alpine #histoire

      –—

      Des livres aux #éditions_transhumances :

      – Venus d’ailleurs (sur le panorama de l’immigration dans le Briançonnais de 1850 à 2000)
      – L’autre versant (traite de l’émigration piémontaise-italienne)
      – Versant de l’autre (côté #L'Argentière, immigration turque)
      – D’Est en Ouest (à propos des migrants venus d’Europe de l’Est à Gap)
      – Des pommes dans les mains (à propos des saisonniers de l’#arboriculture)

      #migrations #Hautes-Alpes #Briançon

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 14/07/2022

      Imbroglio sur le #Markstein. Une histoire d’#arnica dans les #Vosges

      https://i.imgur.com/Lt4xDIZ.png

      #cueillette_sauvage #appropriation #cueillette #or_des_Vosges #laboratoires_pharmaceutiques #saisonniers #travail_saisonnier #cosmétique #Boiron #Bleu_Vert_Vosges #Weleda #Lehning #Parc_naturel_régional_des_Ballons_des_Vosges #AVEM #Vosges_Développement #homéopathie #allopathie #médecine #médicaments #économie #tourisme #cueillette_intensive #extractivisme #pillage

      –—

      Quelques références citées dans l’article :
      Vosges : la cueillette de l’arnica, or jaune des montagnes, très surveillée
      ▻https://www.sciencesetavenir.fr/nature-environnement/vosges-la-cueillette-de-l-arnica-or-jaune-des-montagnes-tres-survei

      Arnica montana
      ▻http://planteetplanete.org/continents/europe/documentaire-sur-larnica
      ▻https://vimeo.com/9761757


      #documentaire #film_documentaire

      Cueillir la montagne - a travers landes, patures et sous-bois

      https://ec56229aec51f1baff1d-185c3068e22352c56024573e929788ff.ssl.cf1.rackcdn.com/attachments/large/4/4/5/009871445.jpg

      ▻https://www.leslibraires.fr/livre/1169705-cueillir-la-montagne-a-travers-landes-pature--raphael-larrere-m

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 14/07/2022

      Voyage, voyage ! Inteview de l’#Office_de_l'antitourisme

      https://i.imgur.com/6p8V2yr.png

      #anti-tourisme #antitourisme #tourisme #Center_Park #Roybon #marchandisation #surproduction #artificialisation #travail #industrie_touristique #folklorisation #temps_libre #congés_payés #contrôle_social #tourisme_de_masse #divertissement #capitalisme #infrastructure_touristique #aménagement_du_territoire

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
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  • @cdb_77
    CDB_77 @cdb_77 1/10/2018
    4
    @reka
    @02myseenthis01
    @suske
    4

    « Le #tourisme est une industrie de la #compensation »

    Le sociologue #Rodolphe_Christin a produit un corpus critique dézinguant l’industrie touristique. Après L’Usure du monde (éditions L’échappée), son pamphlet Manuel de l’#antitourisme (éditions Écosociété) s’offre une peau neuve avec une réédition revue et augmentée. Entretien.

    http://cqfd-journal.org/local/cache-vignettes/L500xH299/-835-f139f.jpg

    ▻http://cqfd-journal.org/spip.php?page=pages_mobiles&squelette_mobile=mobile/article&id_article=2344
    #livre

    #Manuel de l’antitourisme

    Le tourisme est la première industrie mondiale, même s’il est pratiqué par seulement 3,5 % de la population… Un luxe réservé aux occidentaux qui, depuis l’avènement des congés payés, ont intégré « un devoir d’ailleurs et de loisirs ». Mais qui n’a pas senti ce malaise, dans une boutique de souvenirs ou sur une plage des Caraïbes couvertes de baigneurs blancs ? Qui n’a jamais ramené de vacances le sentiment de l’absurde ? Car même les mieux intentionnés des voyageurs contribuent malgré eux à la mondophagie touristique. Et rien ne semble pouvoir arrêter cette conquête démesurée des quatre coins du monde : ni la pollution qu’elle impose, ni la disparition des spécificités culturelles qu’elle vient niveler et encore moins la conscience de l’Autre qu’elle réduit à une relation marchande. Pouvons-nous nous évader du tourisme ? Rodolphe Christin nous invite à retrouver l’essence du voyage : préférer le chemin à la destination, et « disparaître » plutôt qu’apparaître partout.

    https://ecosociete.s3.amazonaws.com/uploads/book/cover/247/247-C1-rvb_BR-2.jpg

    ▻https://ecosociete.org/livres/manuel-de-l-antitourisme
    #industrie_touristique

    CDB_77 @cdb_77
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Thèmes liés

  • #tourisme
  • #industrie_touristique
  • #travail
  • #saisonniers
  • #anti-tourisme
  • #marchandisation
  • #tourisme_de_masse
  • #histoire
  • #livre