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A call for renewal in tourism ethnographic research: the researcher as both the subject and object of knowledge
24
Citations
103
References
2012
Year
Tourism ManagementCultureTourist ExperienceMaterial CultureCultural StudiesCultural HeritageGreater Philosophical ReflexivityEducationCultural TourismTourismEthnographyAnthropologyLanguage StudiesEthnomethodologySocial AnthropologyCultural AnthropologyTourism Ethnographic ResearchEthnographic Research
Our critique of tourism ethnographic research argues that too much existing published work tends to cite preceding studies as methodological precedents without stating how particular approaches were operationalised. Moreover, findings are often presented as individual cases with limited utility in terms of theory-building or wider understanding of contextual phenomena. We argue that closer attention first to current developments within anthropology which seek to overcome researcher naivety and, second, greater philosophical reflexivity would elevate both the rigour with which such work is undertaken and the seriousness with which it is received in the wider academy. We call for a double-reflexivity in ethnographic research in tourism that accepts both the specific situational nature of individual studies and the wider discursive frames within which they are embedded. We call for constant reflection on, and acknowledgement of, this duality in ethnographic research where, after all, the researcher is so intimately embedded in empirical and subjective terms.
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