How Can Consumer Research Contribute to Increased Understanding of Tourist Experiences? A Conceptual Review

被引:33
|
作者
Jensen, Oystein [1 ,2 ]
Lindberg, Frank [2 ]
Ostergaard, Per [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Stavanger, Norwegian Sch Hotel Management, NO-8049 Bodo, Norway
[2] Univ Nordland, Bodo Grad Sch Business, NO-8049 Bodo, Norway
[3] Univ Southern Denmark, Dept Mkt & Management, Campusvej 55, DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark
关键词
tourist experiences; experiential turn; consumer experiences; consumer research; tourism; CONSUMPTION; CULTURE; SOCIOLOGY; MEANINGS; BEHAVIOR; INQUIRY; DESIRE; SELF;
D O I
10.1080/15022250.2015.1065591
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This article contributes to the conceptual debate on tourist experiences. The article offers an overview of the developments within the field of consumer or consumption experience with stress on "consumer culture theory" (CCT) and discusses how this research could contribute to alternative and complementary ideas for conceptualizing tourist experiences as presented in tourism literature. Within the latter, the home/strangerhoodperspective and the perspective of traveling in time and space are referred to in particular. The article describes how movements in the early 1980s have been imperative for the now comprehensive focus on experiences within consumer research, and elucidates the emergence of and the contributions from two main approaches within CCT, the individual and the sociocultural approach. The authors suggest that tourist experience is about how meaning is created and argue that meaning creation is constituted by a mixed configuration of individual, social, and cultural meaning. It is finally suggested that the CCT research can offer significant contributions to extend the understanding of tourists' movements in time and space between different experience arenas both in an ontological and in an epistemological sense.
引用
收藏
页码:9 / 27
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] How Can Safety Contribute to Working Conditions in the Construction Industry? A Conceptual Framework
    Alejo, Ayodele
    Aigbavboa, Clinton
    Aghimien, Douglas
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2024, 16 (18)
  • [42] How understanding and strengthening brain networks can contribute to elementary education
    Posner, Michael I.
    Rothbart, Mary K.
    FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2023, 11
  • [43] Understanding health care markets: How can health economists contribute?
    Rochaix, L
    REVUE D EPIDEMIOLOGIE ET DE SANTE PUBLIQUE, 1996, 44 (06): : 498 - 510
  • [44] How attachment theory can contribute to the understanding of affective functioning in psychoanalysis
    Ammaniti, M
    PSYCHOANALYTIC INQUIRY, 1999, 19 (05) : 784 - 796
  • [45] How the study of Helicobacter infection can contribute to the understanding of carcinoma development
    Stoicov, C.
    Li, H.
    Cerny, J.
    Houghton, J. M.
    CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, 2009, 15 (09) : 813 - 822
  • [46] HOW CAN NDE CONTRIBUTE TO THE BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF THE MANUFACTURING PROCESS OF PRODUCTS
    RUDICH, K
    NDT INTERNATIONAL, 1988, 21 (06): : 453 - 453
  • [47] How can development and plasticity contribute to understanding evolution of the human brain?
    Lent, Roberto
    Tovar-Moll, Fernanda
    FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2015, 9
  • [48] How can epidemiological studies contribute to understanding autism spectrum disorders?
    Honda, Hideo
    BRAIN & DEVELOPMENT, 2013, 35 (02): : 102 - 105
  • [49] How Histopathology Can Contribute to an Understanding of Defense Mechanisms against Cryptococci
    Okubo, Yoichiro
    Tochigi, Naobumi
    Wakayama, Megumi
    Shinozaki, Minoru
    Nakayama, Haruo
    Ishiwatari, Takao
    Shimodaira, Kayoko
    Nemoto, Tetsuo
    Ohno, Hideaki
    Kaneko, Yukihiro
    Makimura, Koichi
    Uchida, Katsuhisa
    Miyazaki, Yoshitsugu
    Yamaguchi, Hideyo
    Shibuya, Kazutoshi
    MEDIATORS OF INFLAMMATION, 2013, 2013
  • [50] The contribution of neuroscience to consumer research: A conceptual framework and empirical review
    Solnais, Celine
    Andreu-Perez, Javier
    Sanchez-Fernandez, Juan
    Andreu-Abela, Jaime
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC PSYCHOLOGY, 2013, 36 : 68 - 81