Vanessa Whittington holds a Doctorate from the Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University (WSU) and currently works as a Sessional Academic with the School of Social Sciences, WSU. Her Doctoral research was in the field of critical heritage and tourism studies. She has a Master’s Degree in Museum and Heritage Studies, a Master of Arts (Hons) in Women’s Studies/ Interdisciplinary Studies and a Bachelor of Arts with majors in History and Political Science. She has previously worked in senior policy and research roles for government and non-government agencies with a human services, social justice and social policy focus. She has published in the areas of Indigenous-visitor relations in protected area landscapes; heritage and contested memory in a settler-colonial context; the marginalisation of working class urban heritage and world heritage discourse and gender.
In this carefully researched book, Whittington invites the reader to explore how Indigenous cultural tourism may – or may not – change visitors’ thinking, attitudes and behaviour. The author urges us to consider how our engagement with Indigenous culture and Country might become transformational rather than romantic, insisting we consider the complex entanglements of settler colonialism and the tourist experience. This is an important work that deserves to be read. Professor Sarah Maddison BA PhD, MAIATSIS, Director, The (so-called) Australian Centre, School of Social and Political Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Australia. Whittington’s sensitive and detailed empirical analysis of visitor responses to Indigenous cultural heritage at two World Heritage Sites shows us how the visitor experience at such places can both challenge and perpetuate colonial narratives. It provides a template for heritage policymakers, managers and tour operators on the forms of interpretation and experience which may be most efficacious in transforming visitor attitudes and promoting reconciliation in settler-colonial contexts, and for heritage researchers in its methods and approaches to the study of the affective experience of heritage landscapes for visitors. Professor Rodney Harrison, Professor of Heritage Studies, University College London, United Kingdom. Travel beyond the familiarity of one’s environs has long been regarded as one of the best educators. In linking the interpretation of Indigenous tourism to the transformation of the visitor, Whittington tackles the sticky challenge of how this might aid reconciliation between Indigenous hosts and non-Indigenous guests in a settler-colonial milieu. In broadly querying interpretation and the modes of interpretation that are optimal, this book draws from theoretical and socio-historical framing that elucidates the ripple effects of cross-cultural touristic encounters. Whether they lead to fertile exchanges or reinforce hackneyed tropes and power disparities is a central contention. Professor Joseph M Cheer, Professor of Sustainable Tourism and Heritage, Western Sydney University, Australia.