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A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


Blinding Golden Pavilion: A research on the perceptions of authenticity regarding Japan

Translated title

Term

4. term

Education

Publication year

2015

Submitted on

Pages

137

Abstract

This thesis explores the perceptions of authenticity regarding Japan among young European travelers. The topic was chosen based on the strong personal interest the researcher holds for Japan and Japanese culture. Furthermore, the researcher is fascinated with exploring the notion of authenticity and cultures, therefore combines the two ideas within this thesis. The study is an exploratory one, where the researcher assumes the constructivist approach and by using qualitative methods looks to understand what are the perceptions of authenticity. Data is collected through 12 individual semi-structured qualitative interviews, which are supported by a focus-group interview and a survey with 59 responses on a preliminary stage. Data collected from the interviews has been analyzed through a theoretical framework created for this thesis. The framework provides understanding on main notions necessary for the analysis, such as travel motivation, destination image creation, authenticity, as well as commoditization and push and pull factors. The analysis revels that the perceptions of authenticity correlate with the destination image that the interviewees hold, as well as, with their knowledge about Japan. The researcher notes three distinguishable patterns, where interviewees with strong knowledge about Japan express elaborate image and perception of authenticity is influenced by Japanese people. Interviewees with medium knowledge, showed a pattern of having a positive image about Japan and a perception of authenticity that is influenced by both physical and abstract representation of culture. For the third patter, the researcher notes that interviewees within it have a strong opinion of what is authentic about Japan and are prompt to disappointment when their image does not overlap with the reality. The researcher named the thesis Blinding Golden Pavilion based on a pattern found during the research of interviewees regarding the Japanese people being the most authentic thing about Japan. The name notes that it is not the gold that shines the brightest within a culture. Keywords: Japan; authenticity; destination image formation; perceptions; travel motivation