Pettersson, Katarina
- Department of Urban and Rural Development, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2015Peer reviewed
Heldt Cassel, Susanna; Pettersson, Katarina
The diversification of farming towards more service-intensive businesses enables innovation and competitiveness within the farming sector. However, running a hospitality and tourism business significantly differs from farming and requires different competencies. It entails face-to-face customer relationships and creating experiences based on the identity of the place and the entrepreneurs. By inviting in guests/customers, the farm is transformed from primarily an agricultural production place to one that produces experiences and services. This paper aims to analyse and discuss how women engaged in farm tourism perform rural and gender identities by producing experiences and services, and how these performances may reproduce or challenge traditional rural and gender identities. The study is based on interviews with women in the two regions Dalarna and Uppland who run tourism businesses on working farms. The interviews show that the entrepreneurs must cope with tensions and conflicts between agricultural production and tourism at the farms in terms of not only practical work and duties, but also how gendered farming identities are performed.
farm tourism, gender identities, rurality, performance
Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism
2015, volume: 15, number: 1-2, pages: 138-151
Cross-programme
Economic Geography
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/65961