Geography
Artists, tourists, and the state: Cultural tourism and the flamenco industry in Andalusia, Spain
Document Type
Article
Abstract
In this article, I seek to demonstrate how research on cultural industries and tourism combined yields insights into the contemporary dynamics of cultural survival in the age of globalization. Tourism is increasingly an important economic force that facilitates cultural mobility and promotes cultural consumption, and in turn contributes to the growth of a regionally embedded cultural industry. I take the example of flamenco music and dance in southern Spain and focus on three agents that help shape this art complex - the cultural industry, the tourists and the state. I analyze how these agents interact, and show how their engagements at multiple geographic scales result in a distinctive and successful cultural tourism in Seville, Andalusia. The flamenco art complex survives and thrives today through the combination of resilient local talent closely linked to identity maintenance, domestic and foreign tourists that engage in cultural consumption, and the government subsidizing the artists through state-sponsored spectacles. © 2009 The Author. Journal Compilation © 2009 Joint Editors and Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Publication Title
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
Publication Date
5-6-2009
Volume
33
Issue
1
First Page
80
Last Page
104
ISSN
0309-1317
DOI
10.1111/j.1468-2427.2009.00846.x
Keywords
cultural industries, culture and tourism, culture, tourism, Flamenco music, Flamenco dancers
Repository Citation
Aoyama, Yuko, "Artists, tourists, and the state: Cultural tourism and the flamenco industry in Andalusia, Spain" (2009). Geography. 837.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_geography/837