
Caring for the Island City: Venetians reclaiming the city in times of overtourism: contested representations, narratives and infrastructures
Author(s) -
Cornelia Dlabaja
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
shima
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.246
H-Index - 4
eISSN - 1834-6057
pISSN - 1834-6049
DOI - 10.21463/shima.117
Subject(s) - ethnography , citizen journalism , tourism , sociology , narrative , perception , media studies , space (punctuation) , field research , gender studies , geography , anthropology , archaeology , political science , psychology , art , law , linguistics , philosophy , literature , neuroscience
Overtourism has transformed Venice into a Disneyfied city in several ways, for example through short-term tourists and their perception and use of the city as a fun park. There is little perception of Venice as a lived-in space which is inhabited by families, elderly people and students going about their everyday lives in a city with only 52,000 inhabitants and a staggering 24 million visitors every year. The article examines the question of how Venetians are reclaiming their right to the island city as a common good for its inhabitants, relating this directly to how the city is cared for. It discusses the phenomena that come with the reshaping of the spaces and everyday lives of Venetian residents due to mass tourism. The different ways the city is inhabited are discussed, and the consequences thereof, based on ethnographic research containing field research in the form of qualitative interviews, participatory observations, analysis of social media activities on Facebook, analysis of secondary data and debates in the media.