Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

The everyday instillations of worldmaking: new vistas of understanding on the declarative reach of tourism

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    43 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    In this article the authors trace the development of attention that has been given to renovated constructions of Goodman's old concept of "worldmaking," as had been originally used in the arts and aesthetics in the 1970s. They reveal how the subject of worldmaking entered the lexicon of Tourism Studies at the turn of century through the transdisciplinary/postdisciplinary applications of Hollinshead vis-à-vis understandings of what is normalized and/or naturalized through the everyday/ordinary activities of tourism (and through the mundane/banal orientations of Tourism Studies, itself). In defining what worldmaking is seen to be nowadays-as those inherited but contested acts of instillation or instillment that version the world (or rather, which privilege certain vistas over peoples, places, pasts, and presents over other visions)-Hollinshead and Suleman clarify that observers in Tourism Studies have actually been commenting on the essentializing and objectifying political character of the storylines and projections of tourism for a much longer time than the last decade (or couple of decades), although they recognize that it is only recently that the particular term worldmaking has come into explicit use, itself. Having scrutinized how worldmaking ideas are treated in tourism/Tourism Studies these days, this article then examines how parallel inscriptive fields to Tourism Studies (such as Cultural Studies/Media Studies/Literary Studies) also richly articulate ideas about worldmaking agency, even though the subject was seemingly adopted rather later in those other domains. It closes with the provision of a number of potential research agendas into the ordinary/everyplace worldmaking instillations of tourism for researchers (and practitioners) in Tourism Studies, whether their critical mindedness is "pure and conceptual" or "applied and operational".
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)201-213
    JournalTourism Analysis
    Volume23
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 15 May 2018

    Keywords

    • Canonicity
    • Collaborative consciousness
    • Collective murmur
    • Configuration
    • Declarative power
    • Symbolic order
    • Worldmaking authority

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'The everyday instillations of worldmaking: new vistas of understanding on the declarative reach of tourism'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this