<p>I thoroughly enjoyed every chapter in this collection. It is clichéd to say that a book is long overdue, but Femininities in the Field truly is, given the glaring lack of attention on the role and impact of gender in tourism fieldwork. This book goes beyond mere method, providing unflinchingly honest accounts of the joys, challenges and complexities of being a ‘woman’ in the field.</p>
Erica Wilson, Southern Cross University, Australia
<p>I have been waiting for this publication all my life. Understanding the place of the researcher’s gender in fieldwork is fundamental to understanding the research itself. The personal accounts here are well written, moving and relatable, while challenging all researchers to be more reflective. This book is not only informative, but transformative – an essential addition to our bookshelves.</p>
Sue Beeton, William Angliss Institute, Australia
<p>This is a terrific book and it belongs in the library of any social scientist, journalist – or indeed, anyone – who plans to conduct tourism research that utilizes techniques of face-to-face interviewing, participant observation, and ethnography. It is a timely and exciting invitation to researchers in many disciplines to take seriously the role and relevance of gender in the research process.</p>
Marc L. Miller, University of Washington, USA
<p>[This book] provides an engaging introductory approach to the practical issues of gender in tourism research which undergraduate students will find accessible to read. Each chapter offers the reader an insight into a specific field which young researchers might find useful when carrying out their own research. Most<br /> of all, this edited collection represents a much-needed contribution to both female and male researchers’ university education and to their training regarding gendered research. </p>
- Maria Sofia Pimentel Biscaia, University of Aveiro, Portugal, Annals of Leisure Research, 2018
<p>I would like to congratulate the editors and authors who contributed to this much-needed book illustrating shared perspectives of female researchers. Brave, honest and sensitive examples uncover identities and describe traumatic experiences of researchers who explore the factors and influences that impact females during the fieldwork. This book is a collaborative work of serious, passionate scholars with lots to say.</p>
- Yana Wengel, Leeds Beckett University, UK, Journal of Tourism Futures, Vol. 4 Issue: 2
<p>This text deserves a place on the syllabus of any fieldwork methods course. It speaks solidly to tourism research, but could prove invaluable for anyone working with human subjects in the field. I only wish this text had been available when I was heading out to do my doctoral research in the Caribbean. Its combination of practical advice, methodological analysis, theoretical rigor, and reflexivity, make it a text that can offer new insights for all fieldworkers, whether doctoral students or established scholars. In addition to all of these strengths, this moving and well-written book is simply a joy to read.</p>
- Jessica S. R. Robinson, University of Chicago, USA, Journeys, Volume 21, Issue 2
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Brooke A. Porter is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at AUT University in New Zealand. She also serves as Scientific Adviser at Coral Triangle Conservancy and works as an Adjunct Professor at Umbra Institute, Italy. Her research interests include aquatic anthropology, marine conservation, marine tourism, social entrepreneurship tourism and voluntourism.
Heike A. Schänzel is Senior Lecturer and programme leader postgraduate in International Tourism Management at Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand. Her research interests include tourist behaviour and social experiences, children and families in tourism, and femininities and paternal masculinities in tourism research.