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Abstract

The paper discusses sounding bodies and more-than-human relations within tourism practices. It joins emerging attempts to challenge the anthropocentric tourism paradigm and to recognise more-than-human entanglements by engaging with sound through a relational approach. Rather than thinking of the soundscape as the aural equivalent to the visual panorama, which one visits and listens to passively from a distance, we explore the idea of intra-active 'sounding bodies' which share the atmosphere with other sounding bodies as they move, and are, in Tim Ingold's words, 'ensounded' during the practice of hiking. The study is grounded in a longer-term engagement by the researcher-practitioners along the UKK hiking trail in Finland and draws upon empirical listening encounters as part of multispecies ethnography in the summer months of 2024. Through the use of the Merlin Bird ID app and an AudioMoth remote sensing device, the paper explores how various listening and sounding practices can stretch our anthropocentric ears and lead to new, more-than-human ethical considerations for tourism practices and infrastructures amidst the ongoing ecological crisis.

Keywords

Rose Keller, National Park Service, Denali National Park and University of Bremen, USA; Sounding bodies; multispecies ethnography; more-than-human ethics; tourism; audio technology; ontology of sound

Published in

Tourism Geographies
2025
Publisher: ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR AND FRANCIS LTD

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Economic Geography

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14616688.2025.2600029

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/145646