Inspiring the visitor? Landscapes and horizons of hospitality

This article will discuss the ways in which landscapes have been conceptualised in current literature building on notions of escape to and well-being with nature, and how the tourist has been placed in that context. Drawing among other things on Gadamer’s understanding of the concept of the horizo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Tourist Studies
Main Authors: Olafsdottir, Gunnthora, Huijbens, Edward H., Benediktsson, Karl
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/inspiring-the-visitor-landscapes-and-horizons-of-hospitality
https://doi.org/10.1177/1468797613490378
Description
Summary:This article will discuss the ways in which landscapes have been conceptualised in current literature building on notions of escape to and well-being with nature, and how the tourist has been placed in that context. Drawing among other things on Gadamer’s understanding of the concept of the horizon, as well as Deleuzian understandings of relationality, we argue that landscape is simultaneously an effect of gathering deep-seated emotions and experiences and an open-ended and forever unfinished story. Due to the irreducibility of the landscape to its terms, a landscape is something that can be shared. We will outline how current practices of tourism marketing and promotion in Iceland could in effect mediate landscape experiences in a way that recognises the tourist as an author of his or her own experiences, rather than a predefined stereotype as in much tourism literature. Recognising the tourist as potentially inspired by landscape, we argue, commands the attitude of respect that is a necessary precondition to any ethical notions of hospitality, altering the preconditions of marketing practices using the landscape to their ends.