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Bounded Explorers: Online Constructions of Solo Women Travelers
Authors:Rachel Douglas  Anne E Barrett
Institution:1. Department of Sociology, Florida State University, 526 Bellamy Building, 113 Collegiate Loop, Tallahassee, FL, 32306;2. Pepper Institute on Aging and Public Policy, Florida State University, 636 West Call Street, Claude Pepper Center, Tallahassee, FL, 32306
Abstract:Women have navigated the world with much less freedom than men—with restrictions particularly great for their solo, or independent, travel. Although much research documents women’s experiences of these constraints, less is known about travel media’s framing of women as solo travelers—with online media an especially neglected research area. Drawing on a leisure constraints perspective, our study examines differences in online travel articles (n = 100) targeting solo women versus men. Resonating with this perspective, as well as the findings of studies examining women’s actual travel experiences, our findings reveal a framing of women as “bounded explorers,” constrained in their solo travel by the emotional, social, and behavioral burdens imposed upon them, hinging on their perceived vulnerability and men’s perceived dangerousness. We find two processes through which women are constructed in online travel articles as bounded explorers—creating negative expectations and encouraging vigilant risk avoidance. As one of the first studies to examine cultural representations of solo travelers in online media, our research provides further evidence of gendered constraints in leisure by revealing the framing in travel articles of women as more bounded than men—a framing that may, in turn, have implications for women’s experiences in the realm of leisure and perhaps beyond.
Keywords:autonomy  gender  leisure  leisure constraints theory  online media  travel
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