Review
Excellent... in some places exciting, in others brilliant. I can pay Hutnyk no greater compliment than to say that his story of Calcutta should survive as a living imagery. - Ashis Nandy, Center for the Study of Developing Societies, New Delhi
A substantial contribution to an established and rapidly developing interdisciplinary literature on tourism as a key topic in the study of contemporary cultures... among the most intensive, original and theoretically sophisticated critical studies of contemporary tourism - George Marcus, Professor of Anthropology, Rice University
Book Description
A study of the politics of representation which explores the construction of a city of intensities.
About the Author
John Hutnyk is currently Associate Professor in Sociology at Ton Duc Thang University, Vietnam. In 2016 he was a Government of India GAIN scholar at Jadavpur University. Before that he was Visiting Professor at National Chiao Tung University in Taiwan. In 2015 he was in InterCultural Studies at Nagoya City University Japan, and since 2014 was Visiting Researcher at RMIT University in Australia, and also in 2014 at Mimar Sinan University in Turkey. He has held visiting scholar posts in Germany at the South Asia Institute and Institute fur Ethnologie at Heidelberg University, and Visiting Professor posts at Zeppelin University and Hamburg University, Germany. For fourteen years he was at Goldsmiths University of London in Anthropology and since 2008 as Professor of Cultural Studies. Hutnyk is the author of
The Rumour of Calcutta: Tourism, Charity and the Poverty of Representation (1996),
Critique of Exotica: Music, Politics and the Culture Industry (2000);
Bad Marxism: Capitalism and Cultural Studies (2004);
Pantomime Terror: Music and Politics (2014); and co-authored with Virinder Kalra and Raminder Kaur:
Diaspora and Hybridity (2005). Contact at:
[email protected]).