This volume is the first to examine the commercial home from an international perspective, paying attention to the frequently occurring but often neglected forms of commercial accommodation including farmstays, historic houses, and self-catering accommodation. Conceptually, it helps to explain a range of behaviours and practices, for example the importance of setting and the nature of the host/guest exchange. The idea of home provides a conceptual bridge to related themes, for example identity, gender, emotional management and cultural mobilities whose investigation in a commercial home context offers fascinating insights into hospitality, tourism and society. This book is structured around three themes. The first is dimensions of the commercial home and includes discussion of issues pertaining to forms and characteristics and female entrepreneurship. The second theme considers the commercial home as an investigative lens to examine wider issues of society, hospitality and tourism such as the commercial home as a tool for rural economic development. The third theme, extending the commercial home paradigm, looks at new areas of development, including the Malaysian Muslim home as a site for economic and political action and the use of the home in marketing regional localities. Commercial Homes in Tourism is the first book to give recognition to this distinct, economically important and expanding form of tourism business by bringing together recent, international research on this common form of commercial tourism accommodation. Given the global nature of the commercial home phenomenon, and owing to the originality of its theoretical contributions and practical insights, this book will be of interest across a broad range of subjects and disciplines interested in the examination of the home phenomenon, including students, academics and business practitioners.
Author(s): Paul Lynch, Alison J. Mcintosh, Hazel Tucker
Edition: 1
Year: 2009
Language: English
Pages: 288
Book Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Copyright......Page 5
Contents......Page 6
Figures......Page 8
Tables......Page 9
Contributors......Page 10
Foreword......Page 15
Preface......Page 18
Acknowledgements......Page 20
1 Introduction......Page 22
Part I Dimensions of the commercial home......Page 44
2 Bed and breakfast, homestay and farmstay accommodation: Forms and experiences......Page 46
3 Hosts as entrepreneurs: Female commercial home entrepreneurs in Gaeltacht areas in the west of Ireland......Page 59
4 Farmstay enterprises: (Re)interpreting public/private domains and ‘home’ sites and sights......Page 71
5 Sharing space with visitors: The servicescape of the commercial exurban home......Page 81
6 Exploring the importance of setting to the rural tourism experience for rural commercial home entrepreneurs and their guests......Page 94
Part II The commercial home lens......Page 108
7 The discourse of home hosting: Examining the personal experiences of commercial home hosts......Page 110
8 Time to trade?: Perspectives of temporality in the commercial home enterprise......Page 123
9 Behaving appropriately: Managing expectations of hosts and guests in small hotels in the UK......Page 136
10 The cave-homes of Göreme: Performing tourism hospitality in gendered space......Page 148
11 Rural dimensions of the commercial home......Page 159
Part III Extending the commercial home concept......Page 172
12 The hospitable Muslim home in urban Malaysia: A sociable site for economic and political action......Page 174
13 The monastic cloister: A bridge and a barrier between two worlds......Page 186
14 The diversification of the commercial home: Evidence from regional Australia......Page 200
15 All at sea: When the commercial home is a sailing boat......Page 215
16 Conclusions and research considerations......Page 225
Bibliography......Page 240
Index......Page 262