Abstract
The evolution of resorts is a significant focus in tourism research and includes a number of important contributions made by geographers. International resort scholarship is dominated by research undertaken in Europe and especially of investigations about the rise and fall of seaside destinations in the United Kingdom. Currently, little scholarship exists on resort evolution in the global South including South Africa. The aim is to analyse the historical evolution of seaside resorts in South Africa using the example of Hermanus in the Western Cape. It is shown that Hermanus represents one of several South African resort destinations that emerged during the late nineteenth century and became established in the twentieth century. Applying a chronological approach, the development pathway of Hermanus as a resort is examined in relation to wider themes and issues relating to the history and development of tourism in South Africa. It is demonstrated that the tourism pathway of this resort shifted over time. Most importantly, during the 1980s Hermanus was re-invented from a resort economy simply based on sea, sand and attractive natural scenery to become an ecotourism destination centred around the return of whales to the resort’s coastline, making it one of the best land-based whale-watching sites in the world.
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Acknowledgements
The University of Johannesburg provided funding for this research. Thanks go to Arno Booyzen for preparing the accompanying map and to Rob Lee for allowing access to unpublished material of the Hermanus Historical Society. The valuable comments received from two anonymous referees were appreciated in assisting the revision of this material.
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Rogerson, C.M., Rogerson, J.M. (2020). Resort Development and Pathways in South Africa: Hermanus 1890–1994. In: Rogerson, J., Visser, G. (eds) New Directions in South African Tourism Geographies. Geographies of Tourism and Global Change. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-29377-2_2
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