1997
DOI: 10.1111/1467-8470.00007
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Selling Paradise and Adventure: Representations of Landscape in the Tourist Advertising

Abstract: The representation of Australia is explored in the visual and verbal texts of the Australian Tourist Commission's 1992 international advertising campaigns. The advertisements employed representations of Australian landscape to signify tourists' desires for either paradise or adventure. By providing the potential visitor with a range of cultural tools enabling the construction of fantasy, meaning, and identity, these advertisements attempt to attract international tourists. My critical reading suggests that the… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…3), marginalising other voices, even though, for instance, country music is also an important part of indigenous cultural expressions (see also Waitt, 1997). Tamworth festival organisers celebrate 'being Australian' at the same time as Australian national identity is defined in relation to a series of mythologies of rural life that celebrate colonial impositions on the landscape, and tint European occupation and experiences with a redolent nostalgia.…”
Section: Creating 'Country' Constructing Tamworthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3), marginalising other voices, even though, for instance, country music is also an important part of indigenous cultural expressions (see also Waitt, 1997). Tamworth festival organisers celebrate 'being Australian' at the same time as Australian national identity is defined in relation to a series of mythologies of rural life that celebrate colonial impositions on the landscape, and tint European occupation and experiences with a redolent nostalgia.…”
Section: Creating 'Country' Constructing Tamworthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The inclination for the tourism industry to portray Australia through 19th century outback mythology has already been documented (Craik, 1994;Rose, 1996, Waitt, 1997. Crough and Christopherson's (1993) analysis of Kimberley tourism brochures suggest regional marketing strategies here are no exception.…”
Section: Learning To Four-wheel Drive In the Kimberleymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Images of the exotic other are used in the tourist representation of Australia as a paradise and an adventure (Waitt, 1997). The Mediterranean is similarly presented as an exotic place: exotic gardens, palm trees, villages with narrow, colourful streets and houses with shutters (Dietvorst, 2002).…”
Section: Otheringmentioning
confidence: 99%