Notes Towards a Phenomenological Anthropology of Travel and Tourism

This paper is an introduction to the <i>Humanities</i> Special Issue on ‘The Phenomenology of Travel and Tourism’. It is made up of four sections, the first two of which provide the main focus of discussion. We start by considering the idea of travel ‘in comfort’, which, as we show, has...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hazel Andrews, Les Roberts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-06-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/14/6/119
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849433626993754112
author Hazel Andrews
Les Roberts
author_facet Hazel Andrews
Les Roberts
author_sort Hazel Andrews
collection DOAJ
description This paper is an introduction to the <i>Humanities</i> Special Issue on ‘The Phenomenology of Travel and Tourism’. It is made up of four sections, the first two of which provide the main focus of discussion. We start by considering the idea of travel ‘in comfort’, which, as we show, has been historically bound up with cultures of the mobile virtual gaze. Comfort, by this reckoning, reflects a phenomenological disposition whereby the act of gazing at an object of spectacle is understood not in purely visual terms but as a spatial and somatic prefiguring of that object <i>as</i> an object of spectacle. A phenomenology of comfort, we argue, steers consideration towards the way forms of travel or tourism practice reflect embodied or disembodied modes of engagement with the world. This line of enquiry brings with it the need for more fine-grained analyses of questions of <i>experience</i>, which is picked up and developed in the second section. Here, we examine some of the important and foundational work that has helped push forward scholarship oriented towards the development of a phenomenological anthropology of travel and tourism experiences. Accordingly, a key aim of this paper, and of the Special Issue it provides the introduction to, is to push further and more resolutely towards these ends. The third section is an overview of the nine Special Issue contributions. The paper ends with Kay Ryan’s short poem, ‘The Niagara River’, a quietly foreboding meditation on the hazards of travelling in <i>too much</i> comfort and of reducing the world to little more than ‘changing scenes along the shore’, all the while remaining blind to what awaits downstream.
format Article
id doaj-art-6a2c545f2ad444f99523efd089c92c06
institution Kabale University
issn 2076-0787
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Humanities
spelling doaj-art-6a2c545f2ad444f99523efd089c92c062025-08-20T03:26:57ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872025-06-0114611910.3390/h14060119Notes Towards a Phenomenological Anthropology of Travel and TourismHazel Andrews0Les Roberts1Liverpool Business School, Faculty of Business and Law, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool L3 5UG, UKDepartment of Communication and Media, School of the Arts, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 4ZG, UKThis paper is an introduction to the <i>Humanities</i> Special Issue on ‘The Phenomenology of Travel and Tourism’. It is made up of four sections, the first two of which provide the main focus of discussion. We start by considering the idea of travel ‘in comfort’, which, as we show, has been historically bound up with cultures of the mobile virtual gaze. Comfort, by this reckoning, reflects a phenomenological disposition whereby the act of gazing at an object of spectacle is understood not in purely visual terms but as a spatial and somatic prefiguring of that object <i>as</i> an object of spectacle. A phenomenology of comfort, we argue, steers consideration towards the way forms of travel or tourism practice reflect embodied or disembodied modes of engagement with the world. This line of enquiry brings with it the need for more fine-grained analyses of questions of <i>experience</i>, which is picked up and developed in the second section. Here, we examine some of the important and foundational work that has helped push forward scholarship oriented towards the development of a phenomenological anthropology of travel and tourism experiences. Accordingly, a key aim of this paper, and of the Special Issue it provides the introduction to, is to push further and more resolutely towards these ends. The third section is an overview of the nine Special Issue contributions. The paper ends with Kay Ryan’s short poem, ‘The Niagara River’, a quietly foreboding meditation on the hazards of travelling in <i>too much</i> comfort and of reducing the world to little more than ‘changing scenes along the shore’, all the while remaining blind to what awaits downstream.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/14/6/119comfortexperienceembodimentmobile gazeanthropology of tourism
spellingShingle Hazel Andrews
Les Roberts
Notes Towards a Phenomenological Anthropology of Travel and Tourism
Humanities
comfort
experience
embodiment
mobile gaze
anthropology of tourism
title Notes Towards a Phenomenological Anthropology of Travel and Tourism
title_full Notes Towards a Phenomenological Anthropology of Travel and Tourism
title_fullStr Notes Towards a Phenomenological Anthropology of Travel and Tourism
title_full_unstemmed Notes Towards a Phenomenological Anthropology of Travel and Tourism
title_short Notes Towards a Phenomenological Anthropology of Travel and Tourism
title_sort notes towards a phenomenological anthropology of travel and tourism
topic comfort
experience
embodiment
mobile gaze
anthropology of tourism
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/14/6/119
work_keys_str_mv AT hazelandrews notestowardsaphenomenologicalanthropologyoftravelandtourism
AT lesroberts notestowardsaphenomenologicalanthropologyoftravelandtourism