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rather than relying on troubling representations belonging to marketers. These projects called
upon ethnography to specifi cally investigate lives impacted by the gay tourism industry.
Conceptual tools are being forged at an intersection between queer and feminist perspectives.
This alliance does not abandon the representation project of exposing the components of their
social construction and their spatial effects of oppression, but also sought to go beyond it by
investigating nuances of lived experiences and rethinking the body as at once material,
emotional, personal and interpersonal. Engaging with the grounded and embodied experi-
ences that remain outside of language poses new challenges for tourism geographies that, for
years, have prioritised sight over all other senses.
 
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