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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
121

'Scenery and Chardonnay': a visitor perspective of the New Zealand winery experience

Mitchell, Richard D., n/a January 2005 (has links)
It is widely recognised that the tourism experience involves pre-visit anticipation, travel to and from the site and post-visit reminiscence or recollection, yet to date few studies have explored the link between these elements. Winery visitation presents an excellent opportunity to explore these phases of the travel experience as wine is present pre-visit, on-site and post-visit. In 1999 this study set out to explore these links by surveying visitors to 33 New Zealand wineries and then tracking their behaviour six to eight months post-visit via a postal survey. From an initial sample of 1,090, 636 follow-up surveys were distributed with 358 usable surveys returned. The on-site survey explored the pre-visit and on-site wine habits and winery visitation behaviour of respondents, while 97 semi-structured interviews were also undertaken in order to provide further detail on some aspects of the on-site visit. The follow-up survey included an exploration of the respondents� on-going purchasing and consumption of wine as well as experiential elements such as recollection of the visit, word-of-mouth behaviour and enduring levels of satisfaction. A number of a priori segmentation criteria drawn from wine consumer behaviour and wine tourism literature have been applied in the analysis of the data in order to provide a detailed discussion of the various elements of this multi-phased experience. Many regional differences were observed in the demographic profile of respondents, while the age profile of male and female visitors were also significantly different. This has dispelled the myth of a 'typical winery visitor' put forward by many early wine tourism researchers and highlights the need for detailed market analysis for wineries and wine regions. Pre-visit wine habits and winery visitation behaviour were influenced by gender, age/generation and country of origin. However, the most significant influence was between different levels of wine knowledge. This highlights the importance of wine education and interpretation, which was also identified as an important part of the winery visit by many respondents. Examination of the on-site experience identified important regional differences in the nature of the winery experience and lead to the coining of the term touristic terroir to describe the nuances of the regional experience. Almost half of the respondents made a post-visit purchase, while there were moderately high levels of enduring satisfaction and high levels of word-of-mouth behaviour. Post-visit purchases were primarily influenced by taste, but experiential elements of the visit (including sharing the wine or winery experience with others, memory of the visit and the service received) were also moderately influential. This study has provided an insight into wine tourism and the behaviour of the winery visitor. It is the first and, to date, only nationwide survey of winery visitors anywhere in the world and one of only a handful of tourism studies that have attempted to track the behaviour of respondents. It has identified important connections between the on-site experience, experiential aspects of the post-visit experience and the purchasing and consumption behaviour of winery visitors. It also provides a framework for the study of other areas of tourism including souvenir purchases, holiday photography, food and tourism and tourist behaviour more broadly.
122

Geographers of writing : the authorship of Aphra Behn and Daniel Defoe in Oroonoko and Robinson Crusoe

Klinikowski, Autumn 12 June 2001 (has links)
Themes of authorship in Aphra Behn's Oroonoko and Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe highlight locations in the stories that expose the author's concerns with their responsibilities and contributions to society. In order to frame a discussion of authorship in Oroonoko and Robinson Crusoe, it is essential to position Behn and Crusoe as travelers who write autobiographies of their involvement in exotic circumstances. Oroonoko and Robinson Crusoe betray the tensions that arise from the barriers separating travel and colonial objectives, individual agency and social action. Although the stories may incorporate truth and fiction, writing enables the authors to present, with symbolic images, concerns with their participation in situations that hinder the free expression of their will. I refer to Aphra Behn and Daniel Defoe as "geographers" of writing because they identify tenuous boundaries that organize social views concerning gender, responsibility and behavior in contrast to individual desires. Aphra Behn's narrative role in Oroonoko charts the tragic outcomes of Oroonoko's rejection of slavery and also draws attention to the reception of a female author. Behn's identity as an author, as it is constructed within Oroonoko, is intertwined with the murder of a slave prince, and with a woman's freedom to write and publish in the 1680s. Although Defoe is the author of the text, he manipulates the presentation of the story to convince readers that Crusoe wrote an authentic account of his years as a castaway on an unnamed island. In his journal, Crusoe discusses his position in his culture and the resulting circumstances that result from his rejection of family and economic position in search of adventure. With limited resources, Crusoe uses writing to redefine his agency in contrast to the threats of the island and his responsibilities to God, family and society. Although there may be discrepancies that blur the "true" identity and involvement of the author in autobiography, these narratives raise discourses concerning the balance between the individual's desires and society's expectations for behavior. Attention to authorship identifies the discourses and contradictions faced by Behn's and Crusoe's participation in travel and the subsequent translation, resolution and apology enabled by authorship. / Graduation date: 2002
123

Discovering Lily Lewis : a Canadian journalist and new woman

Martin, Margaret Kathleen 01 January 2001 (has links)
This dissertation describes my recovery of the life and writing of a relatively unknown late nineteenth-century Canadian woman writer. In the fall of 1888, Lily Lewis, a young journalist from Montreal, embarked upon a journey around the world in the company of another young woman, Sara Jeannette Duncan. Duncan has since been increasingly recognized for both her journalism and her fiction and Lewis has been almost entirely forgotten. I have recovered some of Lewis's work subsequent to the tour with Duncan, identified some earlier work not previously attributed to her, and become acquainted with a surviving relative, and in my dissertation I examine Lily Lewis [Rood]'s life and texts from the theoretical perspective of life writing. I find Marlene Kadar's theory of "life writing as critical practice" as she explains it in her introductory chapter to Essays on Life Writing: From Genre to Critical Practice especially enabling for this project. The process of recovering early writers, Kadar insists, must includean exploration of precisely how they became lost, and must not exclude the contexts of the reader and critic. To explicate fully my own critical contexts, I summarize theories of life writing by several Canadian scholars, including Kadar. I include, as well, outlines of some pertinent work on travel writing, and a brief overview of the new historicist critical 'milieu ' in which my study situates itself. In an attempt to understand the "forgetting" (Kadar 10) that has almost effaced Lily Lewis from Canadian literary history, I examine circumstances today, in Lewis's time, and in the time between that have contributed to her erasure. In an attempt to reclaim for Lily Lewis a place among Canadian women writers of her time, I read and analyse her work contextually and intertextually in conjunction with writing by several of her contemporaries, notably Duncan, and, to a lesser extent, the Canadian journalist, travel writier, and novelist, Alice Jones. I focus upon evidence that supports my contention that a contributor to the Toronto paper The Week, previously known only as "L. L.," was Lily Lewis. I look at Lily Lewis Rood's complex involvement in cultural and literary stereotypes, and I discuss her participation in discourses about the New Woman in both Canadian and international contexts. I hope with this work to contribute to our knowledge of Canada's literary past and also, by encouraging a careful examination of our current critical values and practices, to contribute to Canadian literary scholarship and to the theorizing of life writing.
124

Daniel Defoes Tour through the whole island of Great Britain und ihre Vorläufer ein Beitrag zum Gesellschafts- und Geschichtsbewusstsein Defoes /

Dahlen, Peter von, January 1975 (has links)
Thesis--Cologne. / With an English summary. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (p. 257-272).
125

La escritura de viaje desde la perspectiva latinoamericana: Octavio Paz y el caso mexicano

Cantú, Irma Leticia 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
126

Travel and health risk: a prospective study among Hong Kong outbound residents in a government travel healthcentre

Fan, Pang-yung., 范鵬勇. January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Medical Sciences / Master / Master of Medical Sciences
127

Sexual risk behaviours of travellers in Hong Kong work population

Chan, Kwok-hung, 陳國雄 January 2003 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Medical Sciences / Master / Master of Medical Sciences
128

A cross sectional study among Hong Kong travellers on the perception of risk and practice of prevention for travellers' diarrhoea

Mak, Wai-lai., 麥懷禮. January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Medical Sciences / Master / Master of Medical Sciences
129

e-WOM: Effektiv spridning av åsikter på rejtingsidor / e-WOM: The use of e-WOM on rating sites

Waris Copic, Sofia, Wallander, Oskar January 2015 (has links)
Människor runt om i världen reser allt mer, och vi i Sverige är inget undantag. Våra nya resvanor i kombination med den ökande internetanvändningen har bidragit till skapandet av så kallade ”rejtingsidor” avsedda för resor. På dessa rejtingsidor kan resenärer välja att söka på ett resebolag eller ett resmål och sedan lämna recensioner utifrån egna upplevelser. Men även resebolagen själva har börjat med recensioner på sina resor. I denna studie analyseras fenomenet rejtingsidor med hjälp av begreppet electronic word of mouth (e-WOM) som är en variant av traditionell word of mouth (WOM) fast på internet. Forskningsfrågorna som använts i undersökningen är följande, påverkas resenärer av kundrecensioner på rejtingsidor samt varför väljer resenärer att skriva kundrecensioner? Forskningsfrågorna skall användas för att besvara undersökningens syfte, att undersöka om och hur e-WOM påverkar resenärer när de söker information inför en resa. För att besvara forskningsfrågorna grundas undersökningen på en kvantitativ studie i form av en webbenkät. Undersökningen utfördes på studenter på Högskolan i Borås. Resultatet av undersökningen visar att recensioner och betygssättningar är effektiva men resenärer litar inte blint på vad som står utan de bildar sig en egen uppfattning. Oavsett om kommentarer är positiva eller negativa eller om recensionerna befinner sig på en rejtingsida eller ett resebolags hemsida. Respondenterna i undersökningen verkar också vara mer benägna att skriva recensioner än vad tidigare forskning föreslår. Resultatet pekar också på att de som har skrivit recensioner gör det för att de varit nöjda med sin resa medan de som inte har skrivit någon recension uppgav att de i större utsträckning skulle kommentera på grund av missnöje. Resultatet visar alltså en stor skillnad mellan vad konsumenter gör och vad de tror att de skulle göra. / People around the world are traveling more and more, and swedes are no exception. Our new travel habits coupled with the increasing use of the Internet has contributed to the creation of so-called rating sites intended for travel. On these rating sites travelers can choose to search for a travel company or destination and then leave reviews based on their own experiences. Travel companies themselves have also started with reviews on their travels. This study analyzes the phenomenon rating sites using the concept of electronic word of mouth (e-WOM) which is a variant of traditional word of mouth (WOM) on the Internet. The research questions used in the study are as follows, does customer reviews on rating sites affected travelers and why do travelers choose to write customer reviews? The research questions are to be used to answer the study’s purpose, to examine whether and how e-WOM affects travelers when they seek information for a trip. To answer the research questions the study is based on a quantitative method in the form of an online questionnaire. The survey was conducted on students at the University of Borås. The results of the survey show that reviews and ratings are effective but travelers do not blindly trust in what is said but form their own opinion. Whether the comments are positive or negative, or if the reviews are on a rating site or a travel company's website. Survey respondents also seem to be more likely to write reviews than previous research suggests. The results also indicate that those who have written reviews does so because they were satisfied with their trip while those who never have written a review stated that they would do so because of dissatisfaction. The result thus shows a big difference between what consumers are doing and what they think they would do.
130

On His Majesty’s service: George Heriot’s Travels through the Canadas

Denny, Carol Elizabeth 11 1900 (has links)
George Heriot's, Travels Through The Canadas, Containing a Description of the Picturesque Scenery on some of the Rivers and Lakes; with an account of the Productions, Commerce, and Inhabitants of those Provinces to which is Subjoined a Comparative View of the Manners and Customs of Several of the Indian Nations of North and South America, was first published in London in 1805. Presenting the Canadas in a documentary and picturesque mode, Heriot's Travels since its publication has been valued as an important source of data and information. It has thus participated in and formed part of the received notions concerning Canada and its peoples in the 19th century. My thesis explores how Heriot's Travels constructs and represents Upper and Lower Canada and the diverse inhabitants of these regions. I argue that the text and its illustrations far from providing an objective description, in fact give form to contemporaneous perceptions and values and to aesthetic criteria that had colonialist implications. In particular the thesis examines how the visual material within the publication functions to reinforce or contradict the text's agenda. My contention is that Heriot's aims are much broader than those to which he admitted. For his readers the representation of Canada was tied to prospects of vast expansionist possibilities for British capital, technology, commodities and systems of knowledge. The unacknowledged aims of the book, as elaborated in my thesis were: to confirm the superiority of British rule in comparison to the earlier French administration in Canada; to define the British by a comparison to others, thus marking out existing inhabitants, specifically the French Canadians and First Nations peoples, as simple, indolent and inferior; to tame and commodity Canada through the use of the picturesque, thus ordering and civilizing the landscape for a British audience and would-be immigrants; and, finally, to reinforce Britain's economic claims in British North America. As in other travel writing of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Heriot employs in his representation of Canada the discursive languages of science, taxonomy, technology and ethnology. The picturesque descriptions in text and image work in conjunction with these and serve to demonstrate the role of art and aesthetics in maintaining an established order, and in asserting its classificatory regimes and exclusions. iii

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