ANT, tourism and situated globality: Looking down in the Anthropocene

Gunnar Thór Jóhannesson, Carina Bregnholm Ren, René van der Duim

    Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    In recent years Actor-network theory (ANT) has increasingly been felt in the field of tourism studies (Van der Duim, Ren, & Jóhannesson, 2012). An important implication of the meeting between ANT and tourism studies is the notion of tourism being described as a heterogeneous assemblage of what we are used to define as the separate spheres of nature and culture. This paper explores and relates the central tenets of ANT in tourism with regard to the concept of the Anthropocene. It presents the ANT approach as a flat and object-oriented ontology and methodology and explores its potentials to carve out viable descriptions of the collective condition of humans and more-than-humans in the Anthropocene. Also and moving past a merely descriptive approach, it discusses it as a useful tool to engage with the situated globalities which come into being through the socio-spatial coupling of tourism and the Anthropocene through, as we propose improvisation, valuing and caring.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationTourism and the Anthropocene
    EditorsMartin Gren, Edward Huijbens
    Number of pages17
    PublisherRoutledge
    Publication date12 Nov 2015
    Pages77-93
    Chapter5
    ISBN (Print)978-1-138-81457-8
    ISBN (Electronic)978-1-315-74736-1
    Publication statusPublished - 12 Nov 2015
    SeriesContemporary Geographies of Leisure, Tourism and Mobility
    Volume57

    Keywords

    • Tourism
    • anthropocene
    • Actor-Network Theory

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