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  1. Urry, J. (1990 The tourist gaze. London: Sage. Google Scholar. Urry, J. (1992). The tourist gaze and the “environment.” Theory, Culture and Society, 9, 1-26. ... John Urry and more... The Tourist Gaze 3.0. 2011. SAGE Knowledge. Book chapter . Vision and Photography. Show details Hide details. John Urry and more... The Tourist Gaze 3.0.

  2. John Richard Urry FAcSS (/ ˈ ʊər i /; 1 June 1946, London – 18 March 2016, Lancaster) was a British sociologist who served as a professor at Lancaster University.He is noted for work in the fields of the sociology of tourism and mobility. He wrote books on many other aspects of modern society including the transition away from "organised capitalism", the sociology of nature and ...

  3. Objective: To facilitate better understanding of clinically important surgical concepts a 2-houranatomy review session in the dissection hall was conducted for the final year medical students during their surgery rotation.

  4. Globalising the Tourist Gaze (1) John Urry September 2001 Cityscapes Conference Graz November 2001 Tourism and the Global In 1990 when I first published The Tourist Gaze it was much less clear just how significant the processes we now call ‘globalisation’ were to become. Indeed the ‘internet’ had only just been

  5. Urry, J. (1990) The Tourist Gaze. London: Sage. Google Scholar. Walter, J. (1982) `Social Limits to Tourism', Leisure Studies 1: 295-304. Google Scholar. ... Seeing further: Honoring John Urry's contributions to tourism and hosp... Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar. Gone with the wind? The impact of wind turbines on tourism demand

  6. Redalyc.JOHN URRY Y JONAS LARSEN The tourist gaze 3.0 (La mirada del turista 3.0) AIBR. Revista de Antropología Iberoamericana. ISSN: 1695-9752. informacion@aibr.org. Asociación de Antropólogos Iberoamericanos en Red Organismo Internacional. CARMONA ZUBIRI, DANIEL. JOHN URRY Y JONAS LARSEN The tourist gaze 3.0 (La mirada del turista 3.0) AIBR.

  7. 1 de oct. de 1990 · 198 reviews 629 followers. January 6, 2010. In Michel Foucault’s sense of the word “gaze,” knowledge is paramount. The gazer—all-seeing, all-knowing—quickly penetrates depths and layers to perceive a subject’s essence. In the last paragraph of his book, John Urry referes to Foucault’s gaze and its relation to travel and tourism ...