000 | 01688nab a2200253 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
999 |
_c11783 _d11783 |
||
003 | OSt | ||
005 | 20210623133059.0 | ||
007 | cr aa aaaaa | ||
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 |