Inside the Pleasure Dome: Cultural Tourism on Australia’s Gold Coast

In 2018 the City of the Gold Coast in south-east Queensland, Australia, will host the next Commonwealth Games.  The City is made up a 57 km stretch of coastline and hinterland divided by a major highway. The famous surfing beaches are framed by high-rise development while the hinterland is marketed...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Susan Carson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2013-12-01
Series:Almatourism
Subjects:
Online Access:http://almatourism.unibo.it/article/view/4032
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spelling doaj-474396f7ccde41cfb01face3ea0c001c2020-11-24T21:43:30ZengUniversity of BolognaAlmatourism2036-51952013-12-0148324410.6092/issn.2036-5195/40323719Inside the Pleasure Dome: Cultural Tourism on Australia’s Gold CoastSusan Carson0Queensland University of TechnologyIn 2018 the City of the Gold Coast in south-east Queensland, Australia, will host the next Commonwealth Games.  The City is made up a 57 km stretch of coastline and hinterland divided by a major highway. The famous surfing beaches are framed by high-rise development while the hinterland is marketed as a green, unspoilt environment.  The winning bid for the Games, and discussion about future infrastructure and marketing of the region’s attributes, has focussed attention on the way City residents and policy makers think about their region in broad terms. Whereas in the past tourism marketing has been directed towards the pleasures of sun and surf by day and bright lights by night, various regional tourist stakeholders are beginning to reorient their programs. This paper considers some of the competing aims of the various stakeholders in this region and the interaction of existing ‘cultures’ with new technology and the demands of permanent residents, using data from a case study of e-literary trails developed in Brisbane, the capital city of Queensland. The importance of tourist imaginaries as a basis for using rich accounts of the past for future planning is emphasized.http://almatourism.unibo.it/article/view/4032AustraliaGold CoastCultureTourismMobile NarrativesDigital
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Susan Carson
spellingShingle Susan Carson
Inside the Pleasure Dome: Cultural Tourism on Australia’s Gold Coast
Almatourism
Australia
Gold Coast
Culture
Tourism
Mobile Narratives
Digital
author_facet Susan Carson
author_sort Susan Carson
title Inside the Pleasure Dome: Cultural Tourism on Australia’s Gold Coast
title_short Inside the Pleasure Dome: Cultural Tourism on Australia’s Gold Coast
title_full Inside the Pleasure Dome: Cultural Tourism on Australia’s Gold Coast
title_fullStr Inside the Pleasure Dome: Cultural Tourism on Australia’s Gold Coast
title_full_unstemmed Inside the Pleasure Dome: Cultural Tourism on Australia’s Gold Coast
title_sort inside the pleasure dome: cultural tourism on australia’s gold coast
publisher University of Bologna
series Almatourism
issn 2036-5195
publishDate 2013-12-01
description In 2018 the City of the Gold Coast in south-east Queensland, Australia, will host the next Commonwealth Games.  The City is made up a 57 km stretch of coastline and hinterland divided by a major highway. The famous surfing beaches are framed by high-rise development while the hinterland is marketed as a green, unspoilt environment.  The winning bid for the Games, and discussion about future infrastructure and marketing of the region’s attributes, has focussed attention on the way City residents and policy makers think about their region in broad terms. Whereas in the past tourism marketing has been directed towards the pleasures of sun and surf by day and bright lights by night, various regional tourist stakeholders are beginning to reorient their programs. This paper considers some of the competing aims of the various stakeholders in this region and the interaction of existing ‘cultures’ with new technology and the demands of permanent residents, using data from a case study of e-literary trails developed in Brisbane, the capital city of Queensland. The importance of tourist imaginaries as a basis for using rich accounts of the past for future planning is emphasized.
topic Australia
Gold Coast
Culture
Tourism
Mobile Narratives
Digital
url http://almatourism.unibo.it/article/view/4032
work_keys_str_mv AT susancarson insidethepleasuredomeculturaltourismonaustraliasgoldcoast
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