Specific term required. Based on questionnaires sent out in Hong Kong, these people were classified on dimensions partly named “centrality” and “depth” by Bob McKercher. Dennison Nash wrote a 1996 anthropology book on these people, whose “individualized mass” and “organized mass” types are part of a fourfold typology by Erik Cohen. These people title a “New Theory of the Leisure Class” by Dean MacCannell. An adage by Victor and Edith Turner implies that one of these people “is half a pilgrim.” A study of English seaside towns by John Urry described these people’s namesake “gaze,” which may seek “authentic” experiences. A second-person narrative about one of these people in Antigua opens the book A Small Place, by Jamaica Kincaid. For 10 points, what people spend money and interact with “locals” while traveling? ■END■
ANSWER: tourists [or practitioners of tourism; accept cultural tourists; accept The Tourist Gaze; accept you, the tourist; prompt on travelers; prompt on visitors; prompt on foreigners; prompt on vacationers; prompt on people on holiday] (A Small Place opens with you, the tourist, in Antigua’s V. C. Bird International Airport.)
<Social Science>
= Average correct buzz position