ub.xmlui.mirage2.page-structure.muninLogoub.xmlui.mirage2.page-structure.openResearchArchiveLogo
    • EnglishEnglish
    • norsknorsk
  • Velg spraakEnglish 
    • EnglishEnglish
    • norsknorsk
  • Administration/UB
View Item 
  •   Home
  • Fakultet for humaniora, samfunnsvitenskap og lærerutdanning
  • Institutt for språk og kultur
  • Artikler, rapporter og annet (språk og kultur)
  • View Item
  •   Home
  • Fakultet for humaniora, samfunnsvitenskap og lærerutdanning
  • Institutt for språk og kultur
  • Artikler, rapporter og annet (språk og kultur)
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Tourism, imaginaries, and cultural heritage in the Arctic: The need for studying the particular

Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36903
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4337/9781035319992.00012
Thumbnail
View/Open
article.pdf (788.4Kb)
Accepted manuscript version (PDF)
Date
2024-08-20
Type
Chapter
Bokkapittel

Author
Kvidal-Røvik, Trine; Mathisen, Stein Roar; Olsen, Kjell Ole Kjærland
Abstract
Images and discourses about peoples and places are crucial in tourism, and cultural heritages on display as part of contemporary tourism are often rooted in imaginaries formed long ago, under different contexts than today. This article explores the interconnection between tourism imaginaries and cultural heritage processes in the North, examining their links with regional development expectations and potentials.

Imaginaries, described as “socially transmitted representational assemblages that interact with people’s personal imaginings,” are tools for world- and meaning making which are “both a function of producing meanings and the product of this function” (Salazar, 2012, p. 864). The Arctic, as an imaginary, has typically been a constructed by people coming from outside, from the “central” parts of the world, describing what - for them - was seen as the exotic ways of living in local communities labeled as Arctic. These descriptions often emphasized cultural and natural features distinct from what is found in global centers and has later been transformed into heritages put on display in ethnographic museums, art galleries, and tourism. But these imaginaries also encapsulate ideas about the Arctic’s prospects and potentials for industries beneficial to development.

This article calls for a broad tourism research agenda that recognizes tourism’s integral role in other worldmaking processes. Simultaneously, it emphasizes the need for an attention to the specificities and particular in Arctic tourism studies, since the Arctic is an imaginary - or more correctly imaginaries - imposed from the ‘outside’ on areas that hold diverse populations with distinct developments, economic and political conditions, histories, and heritages. Outsiders’ imaginaries of the Arctic, when treated as a single entity in theoretical thinking, may oversimplify the complex colonialities in various parts of what from the outside is seen as the Arctic, but are home to those residing there.

The article begins with an exploration of early outsiders’ descriptions of the Arctic, before we discuss them as imaginaries of Otherness. We use the concept of Arctification to describe how an imaginary of the Arctic has become localized in places previously regarded as Northern Europe. Using the northern part of Fennoscandia as our focal point, the article underscores the importance of caution and awareness when researchers frame their analysis within the imaginary of the Arctic, as researchers themselves still contribute to perpetuating these ‘socially transmitted representational assemblages,’ as conceptualized by Noel Salazar (2012).

Publisher
Edward Elgar Publishing
Citation
Kvidal-Røvik TKR, Mathisen SR, Olsen KOK: Tourism, imaginaries, and cultural heritage in the Arctic: The need for studying the particular . In: Rantala O, Müller DK. A Research Agenda for Arctic Tourism, 2024. Edward Elgar Publishing p. 81-92
Metadata
Show full item record
Collections
  • Artikler, rapporter og annet (språk og kultur) [1477]
Copyright 2024 The Author(s)

Browse

Browse all of MuninCommunities & CollectionsAuthor listTitlesBy Issue DateBrowse this CollectionAuthor listTitlesBy Issue Date
Login

Statistics

View Usage Statistics
UiT

Munin is powered by DSpace

UiT The Arctic University of Norway
The University Library
uit.no/ub - munin@ub.uit.no

Accessibility statement (Norwegian only)