Tourism researchers could learn from spirit mediums to develop a better way of researching by embracing ‘nothingness’ and opening themselves up to the mysterious and unseen ‘atmospheres’ that surround us, a new study reveals. Using a three-step process to learn new skills, unlearn their existing understanding and then emerge with ‘double eyes’, tourism researchers can teach themselves to operate as ‘mediums’ and challenge traditional Western approaches to creating knowledge. By opening themselves up to new cultures and perspectives, researchers can foster a more inclusive approach to knowledge production that challenges power imbalances and seeks to create a more just and pluralistic global knowledge ecosystem. Publishing their findings in Annals of Tourism Research, University of Birmingham researcher and her colleagues say that new forms of knowledge can emerge by letting go of the self through a long-term, process of unlearning. Co-author Pilar Rojas Gaviria, Associate Professor in Marketing at the University of Birmingham, commented: “As a living tradition embedded in culture, spirit possession illustrates how ‘unlearning’ unfolds – giving us the means with which to consider tourism research from the perspective of a selfless self. “Rather than a spirit completely taking over the medium, spirit possession fosters a more malleable ‘selfless’ self, where the medium acquires new ways of knowing and seeing. “We have neglected ‘nothingness’ in Western thought, but Eastern thinkers are unafraid to explore this as an important part of the world around us – taking the background as the real subject, which can create exciting new dimensions of…
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