Negotiating Hospitality

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A01=Emily Hockert
Author_Emily Hockert
Calls Attention
Category=KNSG
Community Based Tourism
Community Based Tourism Initiatives
development practitioners
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_non-fiction
ethical subjectivity
ethics and tourism
ethnographic research
Good Life
Host Guest Relations
intercultural encounters
Levinas's Idea
Levinas's Work
Levinasian Idea
Levinas’s Idea
Levinas’s Work
Local Hosts
participatory methods
Participatory Tourism Development
postcolonialism and tourism
Radical Roots
responsible tourism encounters
responsible tourism practices in Nicaragua
rural community development
Rural Tourism
Rural Tourism Development
Rural Tourism Entrepreneurs
Rural Tourism Initiatives
Rural Tourism Projects
Rural Tourism Strategies
Sustainable Rural Tourism Development
sustainable tourism
the ethics of hospitality
tourism and rural communities
Tourism Developers
tourism development
Tourism Experts
Uninvited Guest
Van Der Duim
Volunteer Tourism
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032339122
  • Weight: 322g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Jun 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How do hosts and guests welcome each other in responsible encounters? This book addresses the question in a longitudinal ethnographic study on tourism development in the coffee- cultivating communities in Nicaragua. The research follows the trail of development practitioners and researchers who travel with a desire to help, teach and study the local hosts. On a broader level, it is a journey exploring how the conditions of hospitality become negotiated between these actors. The theoretical approach bases itself on the ethical subjectivity as responsibility and receptivity towards ‘the other’. The ideas put forward in the book suggest that hospitality, responsibility and participation all require a readiness to interrupt one’s own ways of doing, knowing and being.

This book provides a conceptual tool to facilitate reflection on alternative ways of doing togetherness and will be of interest to students and researchers of hospitality, tourism, development studies, cultural studies and anthropology.

Emily Höckert is Postdoctoral Fellow in Tourism Studies at the Linnaeus University in Kalmar, Sweden.

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