Exploring non-human work in tourism : from beasts of burden to animal ambassadors
edited by Jillian M. Rickly and carol Kline
Frontmatter -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- 1 Introduction: Working for the (hu)man in the tourism industry -- Part 1: Theoretical considerations -- 2 Conceptualizing non-human animals as “workers” within the tourism industry -- 3 Redefining the work of working animals in the tourism industry: An animal-centric reflection -- 4 Working donkeys in northwestern Mexico: Urban identity and tourism resources -- 5 Animal dark tourism in Mexico: Bulls performing their own slaughter -- 6 Farm animals’ participation in tourism experiences: A time for proper respect -- Part 3: Value-added work -- 7 Animals as tourism stakeholders: Huskies, reindeer, and horses working in Lapland -- 8 Distributed leadership in tourism experiences: Russian sled dogs and Icelandic horses leading the way -- 9 A working holiday: From home to destination with a guide dog -- 10 The donkeys of Santorini: Workers or slaves? -- Part 4: Hidden labor -- 11 Monkey see, monkey do: The work of primates in Costa Rican sanctuaries -- 12 The greening of polar bears: Lively commodities in a climate change economy -- 13 “Cute, but get up and work!”: The biophilia hypothesis in tourists’ linguistic interactions with pandas -- 14 Working animal research: An agenda for the future -- 15 Afterword: On tourism, animals, and suffering – lessons from Aeschylus’ Oresteia -- List of contributors -- List of figures -- Index