Standard
Harvard
Holmes, T, Palo, T
& Fernandes, J 2024,
Making space and beating a path to a marketplace: The uneven spatial ordering of Christmas tourism markets. in S Geiger, K Mason, N Pollock, P Roscoe, A Ryan, S Schwarzkopf & P Trompette (eds),
Market Studies: Mapping, Theorizing and Impacting Market Action. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 280-293. <
https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/market-studies/making-space-and-beating-a-path-to-a-marketplace-the-uneven-spatial-ordering-of-christmas-tourism-markets/C40CBBD6AF385ACDC606722117C88DC7>
APA
Holmes, T., Palo, T.
, & Fernandes, J. (2024).
Making space and beating a path to a marketplace: The uneven spatial ordering of Christmas tourism markets. In S. Geiger, K. Mason, N. Pollock, P. Roscoe, A. Ryan, S. Schwarzkopf, & P. Trompette (Eds.),
Market Studies: Mapping, Theorizing and Impacting Market Action (pp. 280-293). Cambridge University Press.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/market-studies/making-space-and-beating-a-path-to-a-marketplace-the-uneven-spatial-ordering-of-christmas-tourism-markets/C40CBBD6AF385ACDC606722117C88DC7
Vancouver
Holmes T, Palo T
, Fernandes J.
Making space and beating a path to a marketplace: The uneven spatial ordering of Christmas tourism markets. In Geiger S, Mason K, Pollock N, Roscoe P, Ryan A, Schwarzkopf S, Trompette P, editors, Market Studies: Mapping, Theorizing and Impacting Market Action. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2024. p. 280-293
Author
Bibtex
@inbook{bd29f2f819a3409dbcb4cdb82d310f0c,
title = "Making space and beating a path to a marketplace: The uneven spatial ordering of Christmas tourism markets",
abstract = "This chapter contributes a means of teasing out the uneven spatial ordering of markets. Taking inspiration from Schatzki{\textquoteright}s (1991, 2001) practice-based spatial ontology, we introduce a four-part scheme made up of {\textquoteleft}anchors{\textquoteright}; {\textquoteleft}places{\textquoteright}; {\textquoteleft}settings{\textquoteright}; and {\textquoteleft}paths{\textquoteright}. We ground the concepts in an empirical account of the Finnish Lapland{\textquoteright}s emergence as the official {\textquoteleft}home{\textquoteright} of Santa Claus and the related historical constitution of a Christmas tourism market. With the future of market studies research in mind, we argue that this conceptual framework provides a way of thinking about market making as an inherently spatial process, while also supporting investigations of how markets and the concerns they help produce take shape unevenly over time and across physical space.",
author = "Torik Holmes and Teea Palo and Josi Fernandes",
year = "2024",
month = nov,
day = "22",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781009413978",
pages = "280--293",
editor = "Susi Geiger and Katy Mason and Neil Pollock and Philip Roscoe and Annmarie Ryan and Stefan Schwarzkopf and Trompette, {Pascale }",
booktitle = "Market Studies",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
address = "United Kingdom",
}
RIS
TY - CHAP
T1 - Making space and beating a path to a marketplace
T2 - The uneven spatial ordering of Christmas tourism markets
AU - Holmes, Torik
AU - Palo, Teea
AU - Fernandes, Josi
PY - 2024/11/22
Y1 - 2024/11/22
N2 - This chapter contributes a means of teasing out the uneven spatial ordering of markets. Taking inspiration from Schatzki’s (1991, 2001) practice-based spatial ontology, we introduce a four-part scheme made up of ‘anchors’; ‘places’; ‘settings’; and ‘paths’. We ground the concepts in an empirical account of the Finnish Lapland’s emergence as the official ‘home’ of Santa Claus and the related historical constitution of a Christmas tourism market. With the future of market studies research in mind, we argue that this conceptual framework provides a way of thinking about market making as an inherently spatial process, while also supporting investigations of how markets and the concerns they help produce take shape unevenly over time and across physical space.
AB - This chapter contributes a means of teasing out the uneven spatial ordering of markets. Taking inspiration from Schatzki’s (1991, 2001) practice-based spatial ontology, we introduce a four-part scheme made up of ‘anchors’; ‘places’; ‘settings’; and ‘paths’. We ground the concepts in an empirical account of the Finnish Lapland’s emergence as the official ‘home’ of Santa Claus and the related historical constitution of a Christmas tourism market. With the future of market studies research in mind, we argue that this conceptual framework provides a way of thinking about market making as an inherently spatial process, while also supporting investigations of how markets and the concerns they help produce take shape unevenly over time and across physical space.
M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)
SN - 9781009413978
SP - 280
EP - 293
BT - Market Studies
A2 - Geiger, Susi
A2 - Mason, Katy
A2 - Pollock, Neil
A2 - Roscoe, Philip
A2 - Ryan, Annmarie
A2 - Schwarzkopf, Stefan
A2 - Trompette, Pascale
PB - Cambridge University Press
CY - Cambridge
ER -