TY - JOUR
T1 - Journey to well-being
T2 - On the role of culture and place in Japanese spiritual tourism
AU - Schmidt, Januschka
AU - Bolderman, Leonieke
AU - Groote, Peter D.
AU - Stoffelen, Arie
PY - 2022/5/9
Y1 - 2022/5/9
N2 - In the past, research on tourist well-being has often employed a culturally universalist understanding of well-being, which ignores culturally specific aspects of well-being. To move towards a more nuanced concept of tourist well-being, we propose to consider (1) local conceptualizations of well-being, (2) place-bound well-being mechanisms, and (3) collective aspects of well-being. We do so based on our recent research on domestic tourism to Japanese sacred sites. We utilise our analyses of managerial well-being communications to explore the role of three different local well-being discourses (shiawase, koufuku, ikigai). Additionally, we present initial impressions from semi-structured interviews with domestic tourists at two sacred heritage sites in Kyoto, Japan, to illustrate the role places play in the well-being of individuals and their social circle. Based on our discussions, we look at what our conceptualization of well-being would mean for the field of tourism studies.
AB - In the past, research on tourist well-being has often employed a culturally universalist understanding of well-being, which ignores culturally specific aspects of well-being. To move towards a more nuanced concept of tourist well-being, we propose to consider (1) local conceptualizations of well-being, (2) place-bound well-being mechanisms, and (3) collective aspects of well-being. We do so based on our recent research on domestic tourism to Japanese sacred sites. We utilise our analyses of managerial well-being communications to explore the role of three different local well-being discourses (shiawase, koufuku, ikigai). Additionally, we present initial impressions from semi-structured interviews with domestic tourists at two sacred heritage sites in Kyoto, Japan, to illustrate the role places play in the well-being of individuals and their social circle. Based on our discussions, we look at what our conceptualization of well-being would mean for the field of tourism studies.
UR - https://www.wakayama-u.ac.jp/en/ctr/news/2022041800089/
M3 - Article
SN - 2436-3839
VL - 3
SP - 23
EP - 26
JO - Wakayama Tourism Review
JF - Wakayama Tourism Review
ER -