ABSTRACT

The multiplicity of tourism encounters provide some of the best available occasions to observe the social world and its making(s). Focusing on ontological politics of tourism development, this book examines how different versions of tourism are enacted, how encounters between different versions of tourism orderings may result in controversies, but also on how these enactments and encounters are entangled in multiple ways to broader areas of development, conservation, policy and destination management. Throughout the book, encounters and controversies are investigated from a poststructuralist and relational approach as complex and emerging, seeing the roles and characteristics of related actors as co-constituted. Inspired by post-actor-network theory and related research, the studies include the social as well as the material, but also multiplicity and ontological politics when examining controversial matters or events.

chapter 3|14 pages

Reef Controversies

The Case of Wakatobi National Park, Indonesia

chapter 5|24 pages

Mapping the New Nordic Issue-scape

How to Navigate a Diffuse Controversy with Digital Methods

chapter 8|20 pages

The Tourist-Vampire and the Citizen as Ontological Figures

Human and Nonhuman Encounters in the Postpolitical

chapter 9|22 pages

Hotel California

Biopowering Tourism, from New Economy Singapore to Post-Mao China

chapter 10|20 pages

A Fish Called Tourism

Emergent Realities of Tourism Policy in Iceland

chapter 11|20 pages

Topological Encounters

Marketing Landscapes for Tourists

chapter 12|18 pages

Possible Greenland

On ‘Futuring' in Nation Branding

chapter 13|6 pages

Postscript

Making Headways, Expanding the Field and Slowing Down