TOURISM GEOGRAPHIES
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Tourism Geographies Vol. 23, No. 1, Feb 2021
SPECIAL ISSUE:
Creative and Disruptive Methodologies in Tourism Research

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  1. INTRODUCTION: 
    Creative and disruptive methodologies in tourism studies - Milka Ivanova,Dorina-Maria Buda & Elisa Burrai - Collective memory work, creative methods, deep reflexivity, disruptive methods, innovative methodologies, motherhood capital, narrative analysis, online methodologies, qualitative methodologies, serious gaming

    PART I - DIS-RUPTING METHODOLOGIES
  2. Collective memory work as an unsettling methodology in tourism - Bryan S. R. Grimwood & Corey W. Johnson - Collective memory work, Settler colonialism, decolonization, Settler identity, narrative, travel memories, Canada
  3. ‘Motherhood capital’ in tourism fieldwork: experiences from Arctic Canada - Roslyn Kerr & Emma J. Stewart - Bourdieu, motherhood capital, Arctic Canada, Inuit communities, reflexivity, accompanied fieldwork, resident attitudes, community-based research
  4. Social constructionism as a tool to maintain an advantage in tourism research - Leszek Butowski, Jacek Kaczmarek, Joanna Kowalczyk-Anioł & Ewa Szafrańska - Sociology of science, relativism, social constructionism, post-modernity, hegemony in geographical and tourism research, Western neoliberalism, Anglo-American domination
  5. Disruptive and Adaptive Methods in Activist Tourism Studies: Socio-Spatial Imaginaries of Dissent - Ian R. Lamond - protest, events of dissent, activist tourism, critical event studies, activist mobilities, socio-spatial imaginaries of dissent
  6. The disruptive ‘other’? Exploring human-animal relations in tourism through videography - Minni Haanpää, Tarja Salmela, José-Carlos García-Rosell & Mikko Äijälä - Videography, moving image methodology, video, human-animal relations, multispecies assemblage, agency, posthumanism, animal-based tourism
  7. Emplacing non-human voices in tourism research: the role of dissensus as a qualitative method - Abhik Chakraborty - Qualitative research, anthropocentrism, dissensus method, nonlinearity, complexity and plurality, fluid methods
  8. Hanging out on Snapchat: disrupting passive covert netnography in tourism research - Heather L. Jeffrey, Hamna Ashraf & Cody Morris Paris - Snapchat, netnography, mobile virtual ethnography, research ethics, social media, online privacy, lurking, online participant observation, small data, virtual spaces

    PART II - RE/CREATING METHODOLOGIES
  9. A critical consideration of LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® methodology for tourism studies - Yana Wengel, Alison McIntosh & Cheryl Cockburn-Wootten - LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY®, creative methodology, host–guests’ experience, constructionism, WWOOF
  10. Stakeholder engagement in sustainable tourism planning through serious gaming - Lidija Lalicic & Jessika Weber-Sabil - Serious gaming, destination planning, stakeholder engagement, tourism development, co-creative learning
  11. Deep reflexivity in tourism research - Émilie Crossley - Reflexivity, methodology, psychosocial, psychoanalytic, volunteer tourism, photography, Kenya
  12. Challenges in outdoor tourism explorations: an embodied approach - Jelena Farkic - Outdoor tourism, embodied knowledge, discomfort, embodiment, adventure
  13. Leveraging digital and physical spaces to ‘de-risk’ and access Rio's favela communities - Nicola Cade, Sally Everett & Michael Duignan - Trust, access, gatekeepers, de-risking research, host community, social networks, digital methodologies, Rio
  14. Walking methodologies, digital platforms and the interrogation of Olympic spaces: the ‘#RioZones-Approach’ - Michael B. Duignan & David McGillivray - Walking methodology, digital platforms, spatial-urban processes, host community inclusion, #RioZones-Approach, Rio 2016 Olympic Games 
  15. ‘Que será, será!’: creative analytical practice within the critical sports event tourism discourse - Richard Keith Wright - Creative analytical practice, ethnodrama, sports event tourism
  16. Why is research–practice collaboration so challenging to achieve? A creative tourism experiment - Nancy Duxbury, Fiona Eva Bakas & Cláudia Pato de Carvalho - Research-and-application, industry–academia gap, knowledge mobilization, participants as co-researchers, reciprocity, reflexivity, para-ethnography, rural, Portugal - (Open Access)
  17. The case for linguistic narrative analysis, illustrated studying small firms in tourism - Lucia Tomassini, Xavier Font & Rhodri Thomas - Narrative approach, stories, linguistic analysis, small tourism firms, identity, social practice, values, sustainability, ethics
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