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008 210623b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aInce, Anthony
_946661
245 _aReading hospitality mutually
260 _bSage,
_c2019.
300 _aVol 37, Issue 2, 2019 (216-235 p.)
520 _aThis article addresses debates in geography regarding the nature and significance of hospitality. Despite increasingly inhospitable policy landscapes across the Global North, grassroots hospitality initiatives persist, including various global travel-based initiatives and networks. Drawing from research with these travel networks, we argue that hospitality is fundamentally based on a pervasive, mutualistic sociality in a multitude of forms. Such initiatives, and hospitality more generally, can be better understood in terms of their relationship to these wider mutualities. we therefore use Peter Kropotkin’s anarchist-geographic concept of mutual aid – in conversation with Jacques Derrida and other thinkers – to reimagine hospitality as ‘mutual hospitableness’; systemic, spatio-temporally expansive and underpinned by a conception of self that is constituted through, and gains its vitality from, intertwinement with the other.
650 _aAnarchism,
_946662
650 _ahospitality,
_930677
650 _aKropotkin,
_946663
650 _amutual aid,
_946664
650 _atravel
_946665
700 _aBryant, Helen
_946666
773 0 _08875
_915874
_dLondon Pion Ltd. 2010
_tEnvironment and planning D:
_x1472-3433
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0263775818774048
942 _2ddc
_cART