Thanakarn Bella Vongvisitsin , Antony King Fung Wong , Brenda Rodriguez Alegre , Fanny Manner-Baldeon , Po Man Tse
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The tourism and hospitality industry encompasses a wide range of customer segments, including a diverse representation of sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, and sex characteristics. This study explores the experiences of LGBTIQ+ customers within servicescapes via social identity theory. Adopting a queer ethnographic approach, the study conducted in-depth interviews with twenty-seven participants identifying with non-normative sexual and gender identities within the Pan-Asian region. Through inductive thematic analysis, six key themes are identified: heteronormativity, cisnormativity, endonormativity, gender essentialism, gender patriarchy, and misandry myth. The study introduces a novel conceptualisation of sexual and gender normativities, with interdisciplinary implications, that challenge the conventional knowledge of servicescapes. Additionally, the study includes practical recommendations for businesses and policymakers to foster more inclusive societies.
期刊介绍:
The Annals of Tourism Research is a scholarly journal that focuses on academic perspectives related to tourism. The journal defines tourism as a global economic activity that involves travel behavior, management and marketing activities of service industries catering to consumer demand, the effects of tourism on communities, and policy and governance at local, national, and international levels. While the journal aims to strike a balance between theory and application, its primary focus is on developing theoretical constructs that bridge the gap between business and the social and behavioral sciences. The disciplinary areas covered in the journal include, but are not limited to, service industries management, marketing science, consumer marketing, decision-making and behavior, business ethics, economics and forecasting, environment, geography and development, education and knowledge development, political science and administration, consumer-focused psychology, and anthropology and sociology.