FROM STATUS TO STIGMA: THE DISCURSIVE JOURNEY OF LEISURE TRAVEL DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC
Abstract
The objective of this paper is to explore and illustrate how the societal view of leisure travel is
discursively portrayed during the COVID-19 pandemic. We have taken on a different approach
compared to a majority of prior tourism research as we have shifted our focus from major actors
within the industry to the contemporary consumer. Thus, our contribution to tourism-related
research is that we shed new light on the role of discourses in the travel landscape during times of
crisis. Our research demonstrates that there is a divide in public opinion that is mediated through
three prominent discourses: the shaming discourse, the justification discourse and the homo
economicus discourse. These discourses influence and affect the societal view of leisure travel
during the prevailing pandemic, as they, combined, produce a form of stigma around leisure travel.
This in turn renders an ethical and moral debate where the appropriateness of leisure travel is
questioned and challenged, consequently resulting in an increased polarization and a divide in
public opinion. Our findings indicate that the message mediated by the shaming discourse has been
manifested as part of the new norm, and that the politically correct view of leisure travel is, during
the current conditions, more of a skeptical nature.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Marketing and Consumption
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2021-07-02Author
Nordh, Simon
Hedin, Olof
Sahlgren, Christian
Keywords
Discourse Analysis
Leisure Travel
COVID-19 Pandemic
Stigma
Polarization
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project
2021:121
Language
eng