As the tourism world went to a halt in 2020, many called for a transformation of tourism industry and worldmaking. In the research for answers to the multiple crisis at play in this new decades of the XXith century, regenerative tourism is one of the fast rising concept. Usually inspired by the regenarative agriculture movement, regenerative tourism tends to be define as a form of tourism that leave more to the host communities than it takes, while being associated with concepts like resilience, circular economy and alternative economy.
The purpose of this presentation is to engage philosophically, and conceptually, with regenerative tourism through the work of Anna L. Tsing. The presentation will especially focus on her articulation of scales, alienation and entanglements in the salvage economy. Then we will discussed how it can contributes to the understanding of tourism in general, and regenerative tourism in particular, while closing with philosophical perspective for theory and praxis, for thinking tourism and reinventing tourism.
Mots clés : Entanglements|Alienation|scales|Regenerative tourism|philosophy
A105015DL