重申感官民族志:在暗夜保护区感知再生旅游实践

Reaffirming sensory ethnography: sensing regenerative tourist practices in dark-sky protected zones

Journal of Sustainable Tourism · 2025
被引 2
ABS 3

中文导读

通过研究英国国家公园暗夜节,用感官民族志方法揭示公众参与如何提升对光污染和气候危机的生态意识,并探索旅游的再生潜力。

Abstract

This paper affirms the importance of ethnography as a mechanism for identifying regenerative practices in tourism research through exploring a dark-sky destination. National parks in the United Kingdom have initiated leisure-based festivals to raise ecological awareness and preserve protected dark-sky reserves. Yet, scholars have paid little attention to how public engagement in dark-sky festivals can raise ecological awareness of light pollution, the climate crisis, and sustainability issues, and none have explored the regenerative potential that this research addresses. To understand the impact of dark-sky tourism in protected areas, a novel theoretical approach combines Sarah Pink’s (Citation2009) conceptualisation of emplaced sensory ethnography with theories of regenerative tourism. Conducted during the North York Moors National Park Dark Skies Festival in February 2024, the research employed emplaced sensory ethnography to capture the sensory perceptions and practices of dark-sky tourism stakeholders. The study offers new insights into how dark-sky festivals engender sustainable practices among stakeholders through co-produced, emplaced sensory experiences in dark-sky reserves.

旅游可持续发展民族志国家公园生态旅游