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Disruption and creativity are the two ideas around which tourism geographers begin dismantling hegemonic ideologies in tourism studies. The chapters in this book provide a vantage point from where to disrupt first, before engendering progress and transformation within and outside of the field.
List of contents
Foreword Introduction: Creative and disruptive methodologies in tourism studies
Part I: Dis-rupting Methodologies 1. Collective memory work as an unsettling methodology in tourism 2. 'Motherhood capital' in tourism fieldwork: experiences from Arctic Canada 3. Social constructionism as a tool to maintain an advantage in tourism research 4. Disruptive and Adaptive Methods in Activist Tourism Studies: Socio-Spatial Imaginaries of Dissent 5. The disruptive 'other'? Exploring human-animal relations in tourism through videography 6. Emplacing non-human voices in tourism research: the role of dissensus as a qualitative method 7. Hanging out on Snapchat: disrupting passive covert netnography in tourism research
Part II: Re/Creating Methodologies 8. A critical consideration of LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® methodology for tourism studies 9. Stakeholder engagement in sustainable tourism planning through serious gaming 10. Deep reflexivity in tourism research 11. Challenges in outdoor tourism explorations: an embodied approach 12. Leveraging digital and physical spaces to 'de-risk' and access Rio's favela communities 13. Walking methodologies, digital platforms and the interrogation of Olympic spaces: the '#RioZones-Approach' 14. 'Que será, será!': creative analytical practice within the critical sports event tourism discourse 15. Why is research-practice collaboration so challenging to achieve? A creative tourism experiment 16. The case for linguistic narrative analysis, illustrated studying small firms in tourism Afterword
About the author
Milka Ivanova is a qualitative researcher who focuses on the ways
'non-dominant' narratives are re/created through tourism in the cases of dissonant and communist heritage. As such, Milka published her research in
The Routledge Handbook of Cultural Tourism,
Tourism Culture & Communication, and
Sustainability of Tourism: Cultural and Environmental Perspectives.Dorina-Maria Buda conducts interdisciplinary research focusing on the interconnections between tourist spaces, people and emotions in times and places of socio-political conflict. She conducts ethnographic work in such places of on-going conflicts and turmoil like Jordan, Israel, and Palestine. She is the author of
Affective Tourism: Dark Routes in Conflict.
Elisa Burrai offers robust and thought-provoking critiques of concepts such as volunteer tourism and responsible tourism
developed through ethnographic, critical, and qualitative methodological approaches that explore power and research methodologies, reflexivity, and positionality. Her work is published in
Tourism Geographies,
International Journal of Tourism Research, and
Journal of Sustainable Tourism.
Summary
Disruption and creativity are the two ideas around which tourism geographers begin dismantling hegemonic ideologies in tourism studies. The chapters in this book provide a vantage point from where to disrupt first, before engendering progress and transformation within and outside of the field.