Postdisciplinarity and the rise of intellectual openness: the necessity for "plural knowability" in tourism studies
Authors
Hollinshead, KeithIssue Date
2016-07-01Subjects
internarrativeEurocentrism
multiple voices
fantasmatics
hegemony
plural knowability
darklight tourism
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In this article-which is based on my keynote presentation at the "Welcoming Encounters: Tourism Research in a Postdisciplinary Era" 2013 conference at the Institute of Ethnology, University of Neuchatel, Switzerland-I maintain that postdisciplinarity is a form of painstaking (in time and effort) inquiry that makes considered use of academic and nonacademic forms of knowing to trace the plural truths that apply in difficult-to-fathom globalizing/decolonizing/postcolonial settings. In this article, I suggest that open-to-the-future postdisciplinary styles of research are critically valuable where a range or multiplicity of interpretive cultural/cosmological outlooks on the world has been poorly understood, and where important longstanding or emergent en groupe perspectives have been ignored or subjugated by governing powers/agencies. In suggesting that those who work in tourism scenarios regularly have to deal with such difficult contestations of value across the globe-where the poesis or the fantasmatics of local/contesting populations are decidedly different-I draw particularly on Gilroy's work on "diaspora" and on Bhabha's thinking on "emergent/hybrid locations of culture" to highlight the sorts of difficult-to-read ambivalent/protean/transgressive identifications that are readily the stuff of postdisciplinary inquiry. The article closes with the recognition that today, postdisciplinary investigators can harness much from the recent liberation in "social justice research practices" that Denzin and Lincoln (and their myriad of diverse critico-interpretive/qualitative researchers) have advocated, notably the advances in "bricoleurship" recently conceptualized by Kincheloe.Citation
Hollinshead K (2016) 'Postdisciplinarity and the rise of intellectual openness: The necessity for "plural knowability" in tourism studies', Tourism Analysis, 21 (4), pp.349-361.Publisher
Cognizant Communication CorporationJournal
Tourism AnalysisAdditional Links
https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ta/2016/00000021/00000004/art00002;jsessionid=5q0vmrpw1j80.x-ic-live-02Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1083-5423ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3727/108354216X14600320851613