Where Asia Smiles offers an understanding of tourism and its cultural
consequences that is neither a lament at the arrival of tourists nor an
endorsement of the industry as a blanket resolution of social ills in
underdeveloped places. Examining the relationship of tourism to cultural
identity and practice in Davao City, Mindanao, Philippines, Sally Ness
observes and documents what is at stake for various actors who have
entirely different objectives in the creation of a new cultural
landscape. Ness takes an approach that emphasizes the relationship of
tourism to the idea of home and the cultivation of all that home
supports. Without forcing an interpretation, she draws from her own
remembrances and hesitations to explore the ways one is obliged to live
within the presence of this geocultural reality.
Based on twelve months of research conducted in the 1990s, the study
tracks the development of tourism during a time when the industry was
growing faster in the Asian and Pacific Islands than anywhere else in
the world. Ness focuses on individuals and families engaged in three
types of tourism development: family-owned beach resorts, urban economy
hotels, and a government-developed tourism estate. With great
sensitivity to detail, she records the insights of those dealing with
tourism in their home territories, observing closely the cultural
consequences of tourism's particular way of operating at one unique
developing location.