Kirjailija
Philip Pearce
Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 6 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 1988-2021, suosituimpien joukossa Cody. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.
6 kirjaa
Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 1988-2021.
The Green Rocket Cookbook is a treasure trove of more than 80 tried and tested vegan recipes that have been developed with flavour at their core. Written by Philip Pearce, chef owner of the Green Rocket café and restaurant in Bath, the book was created in response to popular demand from the many regular and long-term customers who have been asking Philip to share his recipes for years! From breakfasts to homemade store cupboard staples, it’s full of diverse flavours and global inspiration with plenty of gluten-free options. Try making your own Authentic Thai Red Curry, Macadamia Feta or indulgent Biscoff Amaretto Tiramisu at home – whether you follow a plant-based diet or not, this book is packed with flavourful food that will surprise and delight.
Tourists, Tourism and the Good Life
Philip Pearce; Sebastian Filep; Glenn Ross
Routledge
2012
nidottu
Tourism is arguably one of the largest self-initiated commercial interventions to create well-being and happiness on the entire planet. Yet there is a lack of specific attention to the ways in which we can better understand and evaluate the relationship between well-being and travel. The recent surge of scholarly work in positive psychology concerned with human well-being and flourishing represents a contemporary force with the potential to embellish and augment much current tourism study. This book maps out the field and then draws links between tourists, tourism and positive psychology. It discusses topics such as the issue of excess materialism and its fragile relationship with well-being, the value of positive psychology to lifestyle businesses, and the insights of the research field to spa and wellness tourism. This volume will interest those who study and practise tourism as well as scholars and graduate students in a range of disciplines such as psychology, sociology, business and leisure.
Tourists, Tourism and the Good Life
Philip Pearce; Sebastian Filep; Glenn Ross
Routledge
2010
sidottu
Tourism is arguably one of the largest self-initiated commercial interventions to create well-being and happiness on the entire planet. Yet there is a lack of specific attention to the ways in which we can better understand and evaluate the relationship between well-being and travel. The recent surge of scholarly work in positive psychology concerned with human well-being and flourishing represents a contemporary force with the potential to embellish and augment much current tourism study. This book maps out the field and then draws links between tourists, tourism and positive psychology. It discusses topics such as the issue of excess materialism and its fragile relationship with well-being, the value of positive psychology to lifestyle businesses, and the insights of the research field to spa and wellness tourism. This volume will interest those who study and practise tourism as well as scholars and graduate students in a range of disciplines such as psychology, sociology, business and leisure.
In 1982, when my book The Social Psychology of Tourist Behaviour was published, it was almost possible to review academic research on tourism. In 1988, in a book of similar scale, such a review is almost impossible. The aim of the present volume is, therefore, to outline a body of work which adopts a consistent theme and method in exploring the topic of tourism. The approach is one of emphasising tourists' reactions and behaviours. The work is both behavioural and cognitive, and stems principally from applied traditions in social and environmental psychology. The examples of tourist studies tend to be Australian, British, and North American, principally because work elsewhere in psychological studies of tourists is less well organised. The nationality of the researchers should not, however, confine the application of the research findings, since while the examples may be specific the results are applicable in Brisbane, Bognor or Bogota. The book is intended not just for academic tourism researchers but also for all psychologists, so that they might note an understudied phenomenon within their discipline. For leisure researchers it is hoped that it will provide an opportunity for them to see developments parallel to their own research efforts in studying recreational behaviour. Is it also a volume for tourism managers and executives? In part it is, and the sections such readers might find of particular interest are Chapters 1, 2, 3 and 9.