Anglophone hegemony in tourism studies today
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30991Dato
2011-06-29Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Dann, Graham Michael S.Sammendrag
Building on a recent co-edited work (Dann and Liebman Parrinello,
2009), this account seeks to demonstrate that tourism studies as a field
has been unjustifiably dominated by English speakers. The point is
illustrated firstly in terms of its four major theories that claim to have their
origin in the Anglophone world of the 70s in spite of the realisation that
they had their antecedents in Continental Europe of the 30s. Objective
statistical measures from the electronic files of the Centre International
de Recherches et d’Études Touristiques (International Centre for Tourism
Studies and Research) (CIRET) are then provided in order to reconfirm
this linguistic dominance. These include recent data that relate to
researchers, research centres, book publishers and journals. Finally a
brief complementary analysis is undertaken of the subjective dimension
of such hegemony by examining the phenomenon of self-reflexivity in a
number of leading tourism scholars.
Beskrivelse
Forlag
Universidad de HuelvaSitering
Dann GMS. Anglophone hegemony in tourism studies today. Enlightening Tourism: a Pathmaking Journal. 2011;1(1):1-32Metadata
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Copyright 2011 The Author(s)