Alternative tourism in Budapest: class, culture and identity in a postsocialist city
Abstract
458 BOOK REVIEWS this, fertility clinic managers and coordinators, tourism managers, decision-makers and poli- ticians might find this book useful. Fertility holidays will also appeal to scholars of medical anthropology, tourism and tourism marketing. The book also makes a good case study text for both undergraduate and postgraduate students. Although the conclusion lacks suggestions for future research, anyone interested in developing further research in reproductive fertility tourism will find the themes identified in this book useful. Reference Bookman, M. Z., & Bookman, K. R. (2007). Medical tourism in developing countries. New York: Palgrave MacMillan. Cristina H. Jönsson The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus cristina.jonsson@cavehill.uwi.edu © 2017 Cristina H. Jönsson https://doi.org/10.1080/14766825.2017.1364010 by Susan E. Hill, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2017, xxvii + 93 pp., $80 (hbk), ISBN 978-14-9852-8641 Alternative Tourism in Budapest is an ethnographic study of the imaginaries embedded in an ‘Instagram-able cityscape’ (p. xv) that is mired in the illiberalism of Hungarian leader Viktor Orbán. Relatively short at less than 100 pages, and yet rich in content, the book is an apt example of how the anthropology of tourism may yield interesting insights into the increas- ingly pervasive nexus of intellectual unemployment, precarious work,