
Michael A. Di Giovine is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at West Chester University of Pennsylvania and Honorary Fellow in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. A former tour operator, his research in Europe and Southeast Asia focuses on global mobilities (tourism/pilgrimage and immigration), heritage, foodways, and religion. The author of The Heritage-scape: UNESCO, World Heritage, and Tourism (2009), Michael sits on the American Anthropological Association’s Task Force on Cultural Heritage, and is a founding board member of both the Tourism-Contact-Culture research network and the American Anthropological Association’s Anthropology of Tourism Interest Group (of which he currently serves as Program Chair). He has published numerous papers on food and cultural heritage, and has co-edited the volume, Edible Identities: Food as Cultural Heritage with Ronda Brulotte. He is also the co-editor of Tourism and the Power of Otherness: Seductions of
Difference and The Seductions of Pilgrimage: Sacred Journeys Afar and Astray in the Western Religious Tradition with David Picard, and the book series, Anthropology of Tourism: Heritage, Mobility and Society with Noel Salazar.
Sessions auxquelles Dr. Michael Di Giovine participe
9:00
9:00
11.30 Revitalizing Feasts: Gastronomic Heritage as a Global Agent of Change
30 minutes,
9:00
- 9:30
Partie de:
Food as Heritage: Uses and Consequences of Food as an Object of Cultural Value
Paper
Jonathan B. Mabry, Historic Preservation Office, City of Tucson (Participant.e)
Teresita Majewski, Statistical Research, Inc. (Participant.e)
Dr. Michael Di Giovine, West Chester University (Participant.e)
10:05 Serving Up Authenticity: Marketing the Culinary Heritage of a Desert City
30 minutes,
9:00
- 9:30
Partie de:
Food as Heritage: Uses and Consequences of Food as an Object of Cultural Value
Paper
Jonathan B. Mabry, Historic Preservation Office, City of Tucson (Participant.e)
Teresita Majewski, Statistical Research, Inc. (Participant.e)
Dr. Michael Di Giovine, West Chester University (Participant.e)