Sammendrag
This article examines how the concept of authenticity is perceived by solitary travellers in the Norwegian Lofoten Islands. Its aim is twofold. First, it provides an exhaustive literature review on authenticity that calls for further empirical investigation. Second, it explores how tourists themselves come to regard their experiences as authentic or inauthentic. The basic assumption is that authenticity becomes a shared narrative that is guided by the discursive propositions which can also be found in Western thought in general as well as in the writings about tourism and among scholars. The suggestion is that authenticity – a key motive for tourism – should be explored as a feature attributed to experiences within a discursive framework, rather than as something given. In order to examine authentic experiences of solitary travellers, grounded theory, applying an emic approach, is employed to gather the necessary data. Based on in-depth interviews carried out with forty-five solo travellers, three comprehensive authentic experiences are empirically identified (i.e., defined as such by the informants): social relations (meeting people), nature and solitude/personal achievement (to be alone/do it myself).
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