Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

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How Should I Spend My Time in Spain?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

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Paul Theroux: Invisible Man on a Ghost Train

Jim Benning asks the author of “Ghost Train to the Eastern Star” about his new book, aging and the challenge of disappearing in the age of the BlackBerry

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Eat Ceviche in Lima

Grab a Cusqueña and get comfortable. As Nicholas Gill explains, a trip to a Peruvian cevichería can be an all-day immersion in good conversation and raw seafood.

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Unsentimental Journeys: Wrestling With Paul Theroux

Bronwen Dickey considers “Ghost Train to the Eastern Star: 28,000 Miles in Search of the Great Railway Bazaar”

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After taking one too many headless torso shots of herself, solo traveler Sophia Dembling started snapping photos of her feet around the world, from the Grand Canyon to Red Square


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Affairs to Remember—On-Screen and Off

From “Roman Holiday” to “Before Sunrise,” Hollywood has understood the appeal of the overseas fling. Eva Holland explains the staying power of the big screen Euro-romance.

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Seven Reasons to Have a Foreign Fling

Sure, having an overseas romance is fun. But Terry Ward points out seven other benefits to cross-border love, mon petit chou.

TRAVEL BLOG
6.5.07

Shangri-La: It’s Real, and It’s a Successful Marketing Ploy

imagePerhaps too successful. Five years ago the Chinese town of Zhongdian renamed itself Shangri-La, claiming that the town was the basis for the Shangri-La described in James Hilton’s 1933 novel “Lost Horizon.” “Evidence is sketchy,” we wrote back then, “but no matter.” They moved forward with their plan and now Shangri-La has become besieged by tourists. Whether that’s good or not depends on your perspective. 

Tourists complain of newness and too many shopping centers, according to a recent report by NPR’s Louisa Lim. Some locals also seem fed up, but, as Lim reports, it’s a complicated situation.

New temples are being built, showing the upside of tourism.

At one of the local Buddhist temples, a small souvenir shop is staffed by monks selling necklaces and bracelets. The monks say that all the objects they are selling are for religious use and what they’re doing is for the good of the temple.

However, to be involved in this financial transaction day in day out seems far from the type of spiritual life that many of the monks may have been seeking when they came here.

The situation will only get more complicated. More than 3 million people visited Shangri-La (population: 50,000) last year, and that number is expected to increase by 20 percent this year.

How does a Shangri-La inundated by tourists feel? From the middle of it all, Lim says: “I feel about as far as possible from that mythological paradise.”

Related on World Hum:
* It’s Called Shangri-La, But it Won’t Be Paradise for Long
* Peter Hessler in China: Inside an Obsession With the Great Wall
* ‘Confucius Craze’ Sweeps China

Photo by Philou.cn, via Flickr, (Creative Commons).

Posted by Michael Yessis • 6.5.07
Categories: WeblogChinaGlobal Village

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