The everyday competitive mothering of tourists: global tourism competition, homestays, and mothering labour

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  • Sarah Becklake

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OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)1478-1495
Seitenumfang18
FachzeitschriftGLOBALIZATIONS
Jahrgang21
Ausgabenummer8
Frühes Online-Datum16 Juli 2024
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2024

Abstract

Global tourism competition has entered home and family space. Drawing upon ethnographic research in Guatemala, this paper investigates the postcolonial gendered politics that shape (and are shaped by) global tourism competition, homestays, and mothering labour. It shows how Guatemalan women turn to hosting as an economic strategy and, in doing so, become part of a complex power relationship between Spanish schools and their (primarily Western) language tourists (or ‘students’). Spanish schools only work with ‘host-mums’ deemed capable of meeting their students’ needs, desires, and expectations of homestays as affordable, enjoyable, pedagogical experiences of ‘real’ family. To achieve this, Guatemalan women become cosmopolitan, competitive subjects who devise and enact strategies to commodify, transform, and perform their mothering labour and homes/families in ways that appeal to their Western students. Far beyond creating desirable touristic experiences, the everyday competitive mothering of tourists is having widespread consequences at the personal, local, and global levels.

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The everyday competitive mothering of tourists: global tourism competition, homestays, and mothering labour. / Becklake, Sarah.
in: GLOBALIZATIONS, Jahrgang 21, Nr. 8, 2024, S. 1478-1495.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Becklake S. The everyday competitive mothering of tourists: global tourism competition, homestays, and mothering labour. GLOBALIZATIONS. 2024;21(8):1478-1495. Epub 2024 Jul 16. doi: 10.1080/14747731.2024.2373093
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