Abstract

ABSTRACTTourism is the process of escaping everyday routines and seeking out authentic experiences of ‘the others’. Under the backdrop of social development, tourists’ definitions of authentic experiences differ in varying social contexts. Through a qualitative study of tourists in the minority ethnic village of Gala in the Nyingchi Prefecture, this study finds that the authentic experiences of such tourists are composed of objective authenticity, constructive authenticity and existential authenticity as part of circles of representation, ritual, nostalgia, and interactive authenticity. However, Authenticity is perceived differently by Han tourists and Tibetan tourists. Simultaneously, in the process of the tourism experience, tourists reshape self-reflection and self-significance. The results of this study have implications for the further development of the tourism authenticity framework, for exploring the process of tourism authenticity evolution, and for refining the concept of tourism authenticity.

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