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Edith Cowan University
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ECU Publications Post 2013
1-1-2014
Liminal experience of East Asian backpackers
Huong T. Bui
Hugh Wilkins
Edith Cowan University, h.wilkins@ecu.edu.au
Y S. Lee
Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.ecu.edu.au/ecuworkspost2013
Part of the Tourism Commons, and the Tourism and Travel Commons
10.1177/1468797614532179
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of: Bui H.T., Wilkins H., Lee Y.-S. (2014). Liminal experience of East Asian
backpackers. Tourist Studies, 14(2), 126-143. Reprinted by permission of SAGE Publications. Available here
This Journal Article is posted at Research Online.
https://ro.ecu.edu.au/ecuworkspost2013/430
LIMINAL EXPERIENCE OF EAST ASIAN BACKPACKERS
Dr. Huong Thanh Bui
College of Asia Pacific Studies
Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University
1-1 Jumonjibaru – Beppu, Oita,
874-8577, JAPAN
Phone: +81 – 977-78-1925
Fax: +81 – 977 – 78 - 1123
Email: huongbui@apu.ac.jp
Huong Thanh Bui is Assistant Professor of College of Asia Pacific Studies, Ritsumeikan Asia
Pacific University, Japan. Her PhD is about Asian backpackers, identity, friends and cultural
issues influencing travel behaviour.
Professor Hugh C. Wilkins
School of Business
Faculty of Business and Law, Edith Cowan University
WA 6027, Australia
Phone: +61 8 6304542
Fax: +61 8 63045840
Email: h.wilkins@ecu.edu.au
Hugh Wilkins is Head of School of Business at Edith Cowen University. His teaching and
research interests are in consumer behaviour, marketing and strategic management within the
hotel and tourism industries. His PhD investigated the factors influencing behavioural loyalty
in hotels including the interrelationships between the brand, customer satisfaction and
loyalty.
0
Dr. Young-Sook Lee
Young- Sook Lee ( PhD)
Department of Tourism & Northern Studies
Faculty of Finnmark
UiT The Arctic University of Norw ay
Alta, Norw ay
young- sook.lee@uit.no
Young-Sook Lee is Head, Department of Tourism & Northern Studies at the University of
Tromso in Norway and was previously at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia. Her
research interests are in the field of sociological development of tourism with the focus of
non-euro/ western contexts. She has published on the subject of Korean War and tourism
development, Confucianism and tourism in classic Korean society and tourist gaze of noneuro/ western context.
----------------------* Corresponding author
1
LIMINAL EXPERIENCE OF EAST ASIAN BACKPACKERS
ABSTRACT
Acknowledging the increasing popularity of independent travel from East Asia, this paper
explores the backpacking experience of young travellers of the region from a socioanthropological angle. Using liminality theory as a guideline and adopting a qualitative
investigative approach, thirty one interviews with East Asian backpackers were conducted.
The findings suggest there are dual facets of the liminal experiences of the backpackers. On
one hand, young travellers were motivated to escape from temporal, spatial and social
pressures at home. On the other, their narratives reflected strong commitment to home
through a sense of filial piety, an awareness of their identity and positive evaluation of home.
These findings advance our understanding of the liminal experiences in an Asian
backpacking context.
KEY WORDS: Liminality, backpacker, Asian, escape, connection, home.
2
INTRODUCTION
Backpacking as a form of independent travel has grown from a handful of “drifters” (Cohen,
1972, 1973), “wanderers” (Vogt, 1976), and “backpackers” (Pearce, 1990) into the
phenomenon of “global nomads” (Richards & Wilson, 2004a). The term “backpacker” has,
over the last decade, become synonymous with a travel style that emphasises freedom and
mobility (Ateljevic & Doorne, 2004). Backpackers are defined as those who have a
preference for budget accommodation, look to meet other backpackers, independently and
flexibly organise their trips, take longer rather than brief holidays, and participate in informal
and interactive holiday activities (Pearce, 1990). The backpacker tourism trend is no longer
just from Europe and other developed economies, but also from the emerging economies of
Asia. Acknowledging this increasing trend and the need to better understand the
phenomenon, this paper researches the liminal experience of East Asian backpackers.
The research reported in this paper approaches backpacking experiences from a socioanthropological perspective. The study bases on the theory of liminality (Turner, 1969) and is
supported by the studies of Graburn (1977, 1989, 2001) on the notion of tourism as a sacred
journey. International travel facilitates the contrast of daily profane at home with the sacred
period of travel away from home (Graburn, 2001). This argument leads to the connotation of
backpacking as a liminal experience, which is evident in literature of Western backpacker
travel. For example, backpacking is to liberate oneself from home (Richards & Wilson,
2004a) in search for authenticity elsewhere (Elsrud, 2001; Kontogeorgopoulos, 2003; van
Egmond, 2007). However, backpacking is also argued to be an extension of the home
experience (Richards & Wilson 2004b) and the motivation to reconstruct home via
customised services and familiar comforts is particularly evident among Israeli backpackers
(Cohen, 2004; Uriely, 2005; Uriely Yonay & Simchai, 2002).
3
In backpacking research, (Southeast) Asia has been recognised as preferable destination for
Western backpackers (Spreitzhofer, 1998; Westernhausen, 2002). Whilst the majority of
studies have focused on Western guests and their encounters with Southeast Asian hosts
(Winter, Teo & Chang, 2009) far less attention has been paid to young Asians as travellers in
their own right (Cohen, 2004). Research on Asian backpacker travel has appeared in tourism
literature since the early 2000s, with analyses covering their geographical travel experience
(Teo & Leon, 2006), their ethnographic performance (Muzaini, 2006) and the dialectical
spheres of Japanese independent travellers (Takai-Tokunaga, 2007) and virtual community of
Chinese backpackers (Oong & du Cros, 2012). Although the meaning of backpacking has
been recognised as liminal experience among Western travellers, there has been a paucity of
literature addressing this for individual East Asian (Cohen, 2004). The gap signifies potential
to advance our understanding of the liminal theory applied in the East Asian backpacking
context.
LITERATURE REVIEW
This research is grounded in a socio-anthropological approach in the study of backpacking
experiences. This paper provides justifications for the theoretical perspective of the research
followed by the literature on backpacking in relation to liminality and the context of East
Asian society.
This research is grounded in liminal theory (Turner 1969, 1973). The term “liminal” was first
introduced by van Gennep (1908) into the anthropological literature with primary reference to
the spatial transition from central to peripheral space in the ritual ceremony. Liminality was
later defined as “units of space and time in which behaviour and symbolism are momentarily
4
enfranchised from the norms and values that govern the public lives of incumbents of
structural positions” (Turner 1969, p. 166).
The liminal phase of ritual was developed into an autonomous and independent process. The
liminality has three major components: (1) communication of sacra - the Latin word for
sacred things such as exhibitions, actions and instructions; (2) the encouragement of ludic
recombination – a ritual play element (Latin word ludus) and (3) the fostering of communitas,
a direct, spontaneous mode of social relationship (Turner & Turner, 1982, p. 202). Although
Turner’s (1969) work is originally from the anthropology of religion, it indirectly contributes
to the study of tourism when liminality is applied to the away from home tourist experience.
In evaluation of Turner’s contribution to tourism, Cohen (1988) states that liminal theory has
integrated the analysis of individual experiences with social dynamics and elaborated the
cultural symbolic meaning of the touristic experience within the broader social process. The
most important contribution that the theory made is the combination of “the Centre” and “the
Other” (Cohen, 1988, p.43). Specifically, liminal inversion in one sense expresses otherness,
but in another they also expresses some central social (or human) concerns and values
repressed in everyday life.
The notion of sacred travel and profane home is interpreted in a tourism context in Graburn’s
(1977, 1989, 2001) works. The theory first considers how the study of tourism fitted into
socio-cultural anthropology in 1977. In its later revision, Graburn (1989, 2001) claims that
the temporal structure of the secular ritual of tourism was applicable to all forms of tourism.
The core element of this theory is encompassed in the concept of “ritual of reversal”
(Graburn, 2001, p. 44). It proposes that the motivations and compensations of tourism
5
involved both push and pull factors. Tourists leave home because there is something that they
want to get away from, and they choose to visit a particular place because they will
experience something positive there that they cannot easily experience at home. In this
regard, Wagner (1977) argues that the experiences of Swedish vacationers in Gambia
are a “normlessness” that frees them from stressful routines whilst Gottlieb (1982)
describes how the structures of everyday life are turned upside down when American
vacationers on holiday.
Besides the meaning of an inversion of everyday life as contrasting between sacred and
profane, liminality has also been interpreted as “ludic recombination”. This line of
interpretation departed from the work of Shields (1991) in Places on the Margin, where
carnivalesque and dirty weekends are interpreted as liminal experience. More recent works
often referred to liminality as the inversion of daily life restrictions, in the sense of sexual
freedom (McKercher & Bauer, 2003).
Although the argument on liminal inversion has had a long history in tourism research, it has
recently been faced with critique that the ritual inversion theory is too simplified a construct
(Lauring, 2013). This is mainly because it does not include the social and cultural dimensions
of everyday life such as a response to the holiday experience, rather it explains behavior of
the tourists by psychological mechanisms. In line with this, Edensor (2000) argues that
tourism should not be seen only as time of play and fun away from everyday life. Instead of
being inversion of everyday life, tourism may also be mundane because “it extends across an
increasing vast range of time and places, is characterized by being performed via a normative
array of enactions, and largely take place in regular touristscapes” (Edensor, 2007, p. 200) .
Similarly, Lengkeek (1996) argues that the meaning of tourism is not primarily generated
6
locally but by interpretations made in the tourists’ home countries. The reality of otherness is
not necessarily directly opposed to sameness but rather constructed from the same frame of
reference. Hence the tourist studies should focus more on the interaction of the extraordinary
and the ordinary (Lauring, 2013).
Liminal theory has been revitalised in the context of globalisation and rapid social change
(Franklin, 2003; 2009). In particular, tourism is viewed less as a phenomenon that is
understood, predictable and governed by a set of known parameters and processes, and more
as a dynamic and complex multiplicity (Franklin & Crang, 2001; Franklin, 2009). This leads
to the need to reconfigure the duality of the centre and the peripheral liminality. Due to the
differences between here and there, home and away, working life and leisure becoming
blurred or collapsed; tourism is no longer something that happens away from everyday life in
a liminal space. Instead, “tourism is infused into the everyday and has become one of the
ways in which our lives are ordered, and one of the ways in which consumers orientate
themselves, or take a stance to a globalised world” (Franklin, 2003, p. 2). This argument is
also reflected in McCabe’s (2002) suggestion that the complexity of the tourist experience is
created by a number of developments predicated on the changing character of society in a
post-modern era.
The early work conceptualising modern backpacking dates back to the 1970s. The seminal
work on tourist typology (Cohen, 1972, 1973) distinguished between institutionalised tourism
(organised and individual mass tourists) and non-institutionalised tourism (explorers and
drifters). The conceptualisation of the “drifter” continued in the following two decades
through the integration of age and other characteristics. The emergence of the term
“backpacker” was not simply a semantic variation, but a fundamental shift from viewing
backpacking as a socio-cultural phenomenon to addressing its growing economic significance
7
(Pearce, 1990). Beyond the range of research on the internal dynamics and culture of
backpacker travel, was a body of literature analysing the impacts of backpacking on socioeconomic development. The most recent decade has experienced an exponential growth in
publications concerning backpacker tourism. Recent research into backpacking has varied
between socio-anthropologically based and market-based approaches (Richards & Wilson,
2004c). On one hand, anthropological studies sought to understand the meanings of
backpacking (Binder, 2004; Bell, 2002; Noy, 2004), mobilities (Hannam & Diekmann,
2010), or transgressive behaviour (Jayne, Gibson, Waitt & Valentibe, 2012). On the other
hand, market-based studies emphasised the economic gains, markets, product designs and
operational issues involved in managing this travel style (Wilson, Richards & MacDonnell,
2007). These studies were subjected to criticism for having insufficient theoretical bases and
also for the assumption that backpackers represent a homogenous group (Wilson & Richards,
2007).
In viewing backpacker travel as a liminal experience, Cohen and others argued extensively
that Israeli backpacking journeys represented a cultural rite of passage (Cohen 2004; Noy &
Cohen, 2005; Obenour, 2004). More specifically, the young backpackers left their normal
lives, separating themselves from their family and community to enter an unfamiliar, liminal
situation abroad, where they had to prove themselves by resolving the problems encountered
on their trips. Their successful resolution of problems and the eventual completion of their
trip was an indicator of their competence (Cohen, 2004). Regarding the characteristics of the
backpackers’ liminal experience, Cohen (2004) also notes three mitigating factors in its
applicability. First, a complete immersion of backpackers with their co-travellers in the
communitas is not expected. Second, the apparent inversion of home is not fully experienced
while on the trip due to the institutionalisation of the backpacking industry and modern
8
communications technology. Finally, backpacking is not a complete reversal of daily life, but
in many aspects, it is an extension of youth subcultures in home societies.
This argument lays the foundation for the suggestion that backpacking is a suspension of
everyday life at home (Richards & Wilson, 2004b; Wilson & Richards, 2008). In particular,
the ideology of consuming differences has to be maintained in order to justify travel, but the
practice of travel is often a ‘home plus experience’ (Richards & Wilson, 2004b, p. 254).
Modern backpacking involves elements of both extension and reversal. Therefore,
backpacking provides a temporal and spatial suspension from the norms and values of the
home region. The suspension from home is evident in the narratives of young Israelis. They
are often critical of various aspects of their home society (Cohen, 2004), as the political and
social tensions are the main push factors influencing them to backpack overseas (Haviv,
2005). However, they are basically committed to their home society (Noy & Cohen, 2005;
Uriely et al., 2002) and seek a reconstruction of home while travelling (Anterby-Yemini,
Bazini, Gerstein & Kling, 2005; Maoz, 2007).
Backpacking from different societies, though it may take superficially similar forms, may be
motivated by different problems and tensions in respective home societies (Noy & Cohen,
2005). This is reflected by what Cohen (1995) claimed: “contemporary Japanese, Taiwanese,
Koreans and members of many Third World societies are also tourists in the Western sense of
the term, even though their specific mode of travelling may incorporate elements from their
own cultural tradition” (p. 12).
The growing trend of travel by youth from East Asia has become evident with an increasing
number of free independent Asian travellers. This trend has resulted from changes in
9
contemporary Asian society (Reisinger & Turner 1998, 1999) where younger generations are
now more independent and Westernised (Watkins, 2006). Notably, an increase in Korean
backpackers has been recorded in Australia since 2006 (Tourism Research Australia, 2007)
and young travellers from Korea have become second only to the Japanese as the main
market of people travelling for the purpose of learning English (World Tourism Organisation,
2008). Studies of Japanese outbound tourists indicated a growth in the number of independent
young travellers from Japan (Japan Travel Bureau, 2005; Takai-Tokunaga, 2007; Yamamoto
& Gill, 1999). This growing trend has been evident in China as well, where a small but
increasing number of young people choose to travel on their own (Nyiri, 2006).
The study of the backpacking experience should not be separated from the socio-cultural
context of the home society of the backpackers (Cohen, 2004). Asian backpacking has
emerged from a different historical and social background to that of the Westerners. The
development of Asian backpacking, chronologically, is a much later phenomenon. While
European backpacking emerged from the social upheavals in the 1960s (Cohen, 2004), Asian
backpacking emerges within highly stable societies and a period of long-term economic
growth, where Japanese backpacking has been noticed since the 1980’s (Andersen, Prentice
& Watanabe, 2000) and from Korea, China and countries of Southeast Asia since early the
2000’s. Consequently, there is a need to interpret the theory in regard to Asian backpacking
with particular reference to the East Asian social and cultural elements. The travel behaviour
of young travellers reflects cultural traits and current trends in contemporary East Asian
society. For instance, the tourism literature addresses the collective orientation of Japanese
travel where the tourist is “sent as a representative of an enduring group” (Graburn, 1983, p.
46). Noticing that people from different cultures have strikingly different senses of self,
Markus and Kitayama (1991) identify the Western “independent construal of self” has a
10
distinctive conception of individuality in contrast to the fundamental relatedness of
individuals to one another in Asian culture, which is termed “interdependent construal of
self” (p. 227). Thus, for the youths of the Asian nations that value collectivism, extended
independent travel has been generated from an entirely different social context compared to
Western society where individualism is valued and encouraged (Prideaux & Shiga, 2007).
Acknowledging an increasing independent travel trend by young East Asians and the gap in
regards to liminality and its application, this paper explores how the liminal experience is
demonstrated in the East Asian backpacking context. Within this, liminality is understood as
the away from home travel experience, in which the behaviour of tourists is not governed by
taken for granted norms and values of public lives at home. The current paper delves into this
topic of Asian backpackers liminal experiences by adopting an exploratory qualitative
approach.
STUDY METHODS
The current study employed qualitative methodology and conducted semi-structured
interviews along with observation, keeping field notes and holding informal conversations
with Asian backpackers from Northeast and Southeast Asia. A key advantage of in-depth
interviews is the flexible nature of this approach (Silverman, 2009) that assists in reducing
misunderstandings between researchers and the informants (Babbie, 2004; Bryman, 2006).
While the interview technique allows the researcher to understand the world from the
participants’ point of view (Kvale, 1996), field notes and informal talks supply additional
information for interpretation. The field notes were taken soon after the interviews and served
as a memory aid (Lofland & Lofland, 2006; Patton, 2005). In addition, informal
conversations and observations during the field studies assisted in gaining valuable
11
knowledge investigated travellers’ behaviour and their interaction with their environments
(Kvale & Brinkmann, 2009).
A purposive sampling strategy was used to recruit informants in the current study. These
were travellers from countries in Northeast and Southeast Asia, who were staying at
backpacker hostels while travelling independently. In addition, more than twenty informal
conversations with Asian backpackers were conducted in various backpacker hostels.
A sample size of a minimum ten to fifteen interviews is suggested for credible research
findings (Cresswell, 2002), while the generally accepted number is around twenty to twenty
five (Charmaz, 2006). Exceeding these recommended informant numbers; the current
qualitative investigation conducted thirty one interviews to reach saturation. Participants in
this study included nineteen males and eleven females with an age range between twenty to
thirty-seven years. Among thirty one informants, there were fifteen Japanese people; four
Chinese; two each from Malaysia, Korea, Thailand, Singapore and Indonesia; and one person
from the Philippines. The dominance of Japanese in the sample reflected a mix of
nationalities of backpacking travel at the two sites of the study. Japanese independent
travellers do not need a visa to visit Australia and Vietnam if the trip is less than 90 days.
They are also eligible for the working holiday visa scheme allowing them to stay for a year in
Australia. However, these visa regulations are not available for other travellers from China
and Southeast Asia. Thus, the imbalance in the number of informants can be attributed to the
current visa provision for Asian visitors. Previous studies on Asian backpackers (Teo &
Leon, 2006; Muzaini, 2006) also involved more Japanese, than other nationalities in the
interviews.
12
During the data collection, the first author spent four weeks with Asian backpackers by
staying in youth hostels and going on tours with them in Australia and in Vietnam. The
researcher’s ability to speak Chinese and Japanese in addition to English made it easier to
establish trust and rapport with participants during the interviews. The topics covered in the
interviews and informal conversations included the reasons to undertake the journey, the
perception of the trip and the experience of being on the road. The questions for the
interviews were underpinned by the theoretical framework of the sacred travel and profane
home of the liminal experience in travel. In particular, the informants were asked to elaborate
on the contrasts between freedom while travelling and restrictions at home, activities that
were out of their daily routine and the feelings about and re-evaluation of their home culture
and society from afar. The interviews, field notes from observation and informal
conversations were translated (when they were not in English) and transcribed into English.
The material was then systematically examined through thematic content analysis. This
method of analysis was appropriate for this study, because it assisted in the categorisation of
themes in the interview transcripts (Boyatzis, 1998).
FINDINGS
Analysis of the narratives of Asian participants in this study suggests both a desire for
freedom from home and a strong commitment to home. The liminal experience of the Asian
backpackers is a negotiation between the motivation to escape from home and the sense of
connection to home.
A sense of escape
While travelling, the backpackers were set free from temporal, spatial and social constraints
of their daily routines at home. The first dimension of the freedom is in regards to the
13
motivation to escape from time pressures. Young Asians rarely have gap years between their
study and work, as in the case of Western travellers. A competitive study environment, in
addition to a rather poor social security system in East Asia, results in young people being
placed under pressure to rush for good jobs immediately after their graduation, to earn their
living and save up for their future. Consequently, young Asians often embark on long-term
international travel in their late twenties after they have saved enough money, or get bored or
burnt out due to pressure at work. In contrast to Western backpackers, who travel in their gap
years before going to university in their early 20s, young Asian travellers in this study took
their gap year in their late 20s. This is reflected in the average age of the participants in this
study being around 27. Two third of the respondents had completed their tertiary education
and gained a few years of work experience before travelling. In addition, many respondents
in this study perceived the gap years as the time before getting married.
For example, a married male respondent in his early thirties wished to go back to the time of
his youth without worries and travel as much as possible. The relatively short period to be
free from the constraints made the trips more valuable to him.
I travel mainly to get away from work, from family and responsibilities. If I was
younger and had not got married, I would have spent a year travelling provided that I
had enough money for accommodation and food. Sometimes, I do not care where I am
going.
Even though female travellers were less concerned with work and income they also tried to
take gap years before they get married. The desire to live their own dream before taking on
the responsibility of life as married women was evidenced in a narrative of a 26 year old
female informant.
14
I am lucky because I am a girl. Being a girl I do not have to take the responsibility to
have a good job and earn enough money to support my family. I can have time for
myself to travel before getting married. After this trip, I will find a partner and possibly
get married.
The second aspect of freedom identified was in relation to an escape from spatial constraints,
which was evoked from comparisons of home with a foreign destination in terms of physical
space. Respondents from China made comments on the crowdedness and rapidity of life at
home, where they could not slow down or relax.
I love to hang around in Hanoi. I usually walk around the small streets to see things…
There is something different from China that I can feel. It is the breath of the old Hanoi,
the lives of people in transition. Everything here is peaceful as compare to China.
There are people everywhere and everyplace is a crowded.
A Singaporean participant mentioned a busy life leaving limited time for socialisation and
human contacts. The friendliness and hospitality of the Vietnamese people gave positive
impressions, which they could not find at home.
In Singapore, everyone is so busy and in such a hurry that many times people forget the
small, yet important things in life – such as spending time with family and friends.
Although I only been here for a little under two weeks, I made lots of friends because
everyone is so friendly. Every morning I buy a “banh bao” from a lady across from my
hotel and she always greets me with a smile. She’s great! I will miss her and her “banh
bao” too.
The freedom they enjoyed during travelling accentuated their emotional transformation as
described by a Chinese female respondent.
15
The most memorable thing is when I visited Ham Rong Mountain in Sapa. You
know it is a very nice mountain, being on the top of the mountain you can panorama
the whole city of Sapa. I will never forget that feeling, when I felt totally relaxed
and I could almost touch the cloud. It’s so amazing.
The feeling of freedom and relaxation can make life more meaningful as a Japanese male
amateur photographer, revealed about his renewed feeling for life “I love and appreciate this
life”.
The third dimension of the escape identified is the freedom from social regulations. Those
who quit jobs to travel loved to compare a carefree life when travelling and the social burdens
of a “just working life”. Travel was an escape from a strictly regulated life at work.
It has been much easier and relaxing. I can wake up late, I can go anywhere I
like…When I was working, everyday was the same…
The relaxing lifestyle and easy-going working atmosphere in Australia sharply contrasted
with the workaholic culture in Japan, where long working hours, punctuality, high levels of
responsibility and strict service quality is commonly expected. In particular, male travellers
enjoyed the drinking and party culture of backpacking. For example, a twenty-five year old
male respondent described his freedom life in Australia.
I do not have to wake up early, get in to train from Kanagawa to Tokyo. More drink
here, you know. I get more time. In Japan I cannot drink, I have to work.
While enjoying a dream-like working environment in Australia, a female Japanese
respondent was constantly worried about her ability to reintegrate into Japanese society after
having “too much freedom” in Australia. Differently, male respondents were worried about
16
excessive drinking as a consequence of too much freedom and without being “observed” by
their parents, friends or colleges. The narrative of a 27 male informant from Japan is an
example.
I came to Australia to learn English. I want to stay here for 2 years. I came here on my
working holiday visa. My first job was to collect fruit or vegetable but I quitted my job
two days ago. It was such as boring job. For almost two months, I keep drinking every
day. My life here is getting terrible.
The sense of freedom perceived by the backpackers while travelling was connected to the
three motivations of escape from the temporal, spatial and social constraints of daily routine.
While the escapes from the pressures at home are justifications for travelling, being away
from home strengthened the sense of connection to home amongst young Asians in this study
as elaborated in the following section.
A sense of connection
A round-the-world trip for six months or a year has increased in popularity amongst Asian
youth, particularly amongst Japanese and Koreans. The differences between the homeland
and destinations overseas provoked new attitudinal perspectives. The connections to home
were expressed in their nostalgic feelings about cosy home, an awareness of identity and a
positive attitude about home.
Firstly, filial piety was reflected in Asian backpackers’ narrative about their parents. Young
travellers were reminded of their mother’s cooking and the cosy atmosphere at home. The
appreciation of home was most often noted amongst female participants. To some extent, the
17
experience of a long-term trip had strengthened family ties, as twenty five years old female
Japanese said.
When I was in Japan, I hardly helped my Mum with housework such as cleaning,
laundry, stuff like that. In New Zealand, I have to do everything by myself. But now I
start to think: Oh my God, why did I not help my Mum? I really, really feel sorry for
that. And now I really appreciate my family for what they have done for me, they have
treated me so well. I hope that I will do more housework with my Mum when I go back
to Japan.
Contrasting between the experience of places, cultures and people of the destination also
helped these young people to realise their identity. The awareness of who they were and
where they belonged to emerged when they were in contact with those outside of their
community. In particular, Asian backpackers were conscious about the distinction of the
home and non-home sphere. For example, a Chinese male respondent in his late thirties
remarked how his confidence changed when he moved between the homeland and a foreign
place on international travel. His sense of self- confidence was enhanced when he was a
bridge between the Westerners, who could only speak English and knew little of the host, and
the locals in China, who had plenty of things to offer but were unable to speak English. While
travelling outside of China this dominant position was no longer available and, he then felt a
lack of confidence.
If I travel in China, I feel more confident travelling with Westerners, firstly, because I
can speak English and I can be a translator for them. I have good knowledge of the
locals, so I am more confident. If I travel outside China, I want to go with other Asians,
because if I go with Westerners, they seem to be dominant in decision making and that
makes me uncomfortable.
18
The journey to find out about oneself was described in the narrative of a 25 year old Japanese
informant. The journey began when she was suffering from acute homesickness during the
first few weeks in New Zealand. She realised that the cause of her homesickness was
something inside her, a feeling of being separated from her Japanese community in a far
away and isolated place. The dilemma was common among her friends as well.
I thought probably because there were not many Asian and Japanese in Dunedin, and
the city is small. So I went to Auckland, a bigger city to see if it would be different…I
realised that it wasn’t the city that made the difference. It was something inside me. It
was my homesickness.
Findings from participant observation assisted interpreting the realisation of a shared identity
among travellers. The backpacking industry in has developed a range of products and
facilities supporting co-national network establishments. Observations and informal talks
with the service providers indicated that Asian travellers preferred to stay in particular hostels
with staff and tour providers that were recommended in the guidebooks of their own
languages. For example, this cultural bubble can be found in Cairns in relation to Japanese,
where Japanese hubs to introduce part time jobs and accommodations to working holiday
makers were popular in the fieldwork sites. Plenty of private advertisements for Japanese
share-mates and jobs were found on the public notice boards of these hubs. The Japanese
‘enclave’ was designed not only to assist those who have language difficulties but also offer a
home-like environment, and thus, strengthening their ties to home.
Travelling was a way to open a door to see how the world outside was different to their
home. However, from the perspective of the respondents, the differences from home in their
19
travel ‘world out there’ were not necessarily charming. They were exposed to the less
desirable aspects of human life that they might not have seen at home. This experience was
illustrated by a male Japanese respondent, who travelled to the former Indochina (Vietnam,
Laos and Cambodia). In this place he encountered a society suffering from poverty, despair
and post-war effects that were disillusioning. This experience changed the way he thought
about developing countries and better appreciated his life at home.
When I came to Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, many things reminded me of the war.
People are so poor because of the war. I know more about the war and its sorrows… In
Japan, we live in peace.
In addition, from the perspective of Asian backpackers, the outcome of travel was not only to
enjoy life, but also to accumulate knowledge, skills and social relations that would be
invaluable for their future lives at home. For instance, a male Japanese respondent found
travelling useful for improving his English, since he had to speak English all the time, even in
a non-English speaking country such as Vietnam. A better command of English was
perceived to be an advantage in finding a good job at home.
I want to learn English. Here nobody speaks Japanese so I have to try to speak
English. That is good for my English.
It is an advantage…I guess more people want to learn English. I can have a better
job in Japan.
Future job concerns, apart from language issues, also appeared to be an important
consideration. The backpackers tended to look for relevant experiences that would enhance
20
their career at home. For instance, a Chinese musician took opportunities to listen and learn
about the local music.
I am a musician. I just want to listen to the local music. I am interested in music
from all over the world. Vietnam is a good place to learn of traditional music.
Music here has a long history and many interesting things to know about.
Thus, for young Asians, travel was not entirely for pleasure, participants took the opportunity
of travel to accumulate knowledge in relation to their interest or future jobs at home as home
was perceived as a better place where their parents lived, where there was a community to
belong to and a place to live and work upon returning from their travel.
DISCUSSION
The liminal experience of Asian backpackers in this study contains two inseparable facets.
While spatial, temporal and social pressures of daily life pushed them away from home, the
familial piety, the identity realisation and positive aspects of home pulled them back. The
interplay between the motivation to escape from home and the desire for connection was
evident. The homeland is an indispensable part of the away from home experience for young
Asians. This interrelationship is displayed in Figure 1.
Insert Figure 1 about here
In liminality theory (Turner 1969), international travel is a sacred period when travellers are
temporally and spatially enfranchised from the norms and values that govern their public
lives at home. In a tourism context liminality is considered as a ritual of reversal from
everyday life (Graburn 1977, 1989, 2001), and as playful, transgressed behaviour (Shields,
1991). Findings from this study suggests on the one hand, the experience of Asian
21
backpackers reflects the ritual of reversal as the travellers sought freedom from temporal,
spatial and social constraints, and thus reflects Graburn’s (2001) interpretation of liminality.
On the other hand, the study provides empirical evidence supporting the ludic elements, such
as excessive drinking, commonly found among young backpackers, which is in line with the
conceptualisation of liminality as playful period initiated by Shield (1991).
Backpackers often travel in a longer period, sometimes up to a year as in the case of working
holiday makers in Australia. With an extended holiday, the level of mundane which
developed along the trip may overcome the transition period of liminality, making the
extraordinary period of travel become the ordinary period of everyday life. Therefore,
backpacking travel reflects the mundane nature of travel as argued by Edensor (2007). In fact,
the ‘pseudo home’ in popular touristscapes such as backpacker enclaves functions as a
mundane element in Asian backpacking experiences.
The interplay between the motivation to escape and the desire for connection identified in this
study verifies Franklin’s (2003) argument on the complexity of the tourism experience, where
the separation of the sphere of sacredness and profane is unclear. Indeed, the apparent
inversion of home is not fully experienced while on the road due to the institutionalisation of
the backpacking industry, such as the enclaves, which makes the separation from home less
severe. Backpacking in many aspects; it is an extension of the youth subcultures of home
societies. Backpackers may seek reversal of the home environment, but the practice of
backpacking is bound by the cultural norms of life at home. The pressures of daily life at
home push them to travel, but the familiarity and commitment to the home environment pull
them back.
22
In relation to the backpacking literature, the findings from this study supported the argument
that backpacking is a temporal and spatial suspension of everyday life (Richards &Wilson,
2004c). The suspension of reality is found to be universal among Asian and Western
backpackers, thus, realigns the argument of Richards and Wilson (2004c) on the existence of
backpacker subculture. In particular, commitment to home elements is commonly found as
vital in shaping the travel experiences of both the Asian backpackers in this study, and of
Israeli backpackers. Both Asians and Israelis strongly commit to their home societies. The
social pressures are found to be common push factors of travelling for youth from Asia and
Israel. In addition, the awareness of a shared identity among those of the same culture is
evidenced in both Israeli and Asian youth.
However, they are different in their attitude towards home. The Israeli youths often embark
on long-term backpacking trips after military service (Maoz, 2007; Noy, 2004) to get away
from social tension and political pressure at home (Haviv, 2005). In contrast, Asian
backpacking has emerged from within a highly stable society during a period of long-term
economic growth (Andersen et al., 2000; Prideaux & Shiga, 2007). They escape from home
because of pressures at work and boredom at home. The differences in the social context of
home experienced by Asian and Israeli backpackers might explain the discrepancies in the
critical evaluations they offer of their homeland. For the Israeli backpackers, home appears to
have a push effect (Haviv, 2005) whereas for the Asian backpackers home tends to reinforce
more positive pull values and to project their future at home.
East Asian backpackers also display certain characteristics that are shaped by their home
cultures. As Cohen (2004) emphasises the analysis of backpackers should take into account
the context of their home culture. In particular, the related and interdependent nature of Asian
23
culture might offer an explanation for the backpackers’ attitudes towards social identity and
filial piety. The context of Asian culture within which this study is placed can provide some
explanation for the dual facets of the liminal travel experience. This Asian backpackers’
commitment to home may be explained by adopting the theory of Asian interdependence to
the notion of self and the collectivism in Asian culture (Markus & Kitayama, 1991).
CONCLUSION
This research contributes to furthering our knowledge on travel as a liminal experience from
an Asian perspective. The findings of the study align the attention of scholars and marketers
to a relatively new phenomenon and capture its dynamic nature at early stage of research into
Asian backpacking, an increasing important segment of tourism. Analyzing the facets of the
liminal experience of these young travelers from Asia, the study recognises the complexity of
liminality in the travel experience through the coexistence of two contrasting elements of
escape from, and connection to, home that were evident in the narratives of East Asian
backpackers. The complexity of the travel experience of the young Asians is reflected
through the intertwining of the sense of escape from home and the sense of connection to
home. The Asian homeland is often represented in their travel experience narratives and
recounted as an indispensable part of the experience. In other words, the liminal experience
of Asian backpackers on one hand shares the universal characteristics of the sub-culture, but
on the other it also reflects unique elements of Asian culture, where young people from the
region are committed to their homeland, and home culture both on travelling and upon
completion of the trip.
Theoretically, the dualism of sacred/extraordinary travel and profane/ordinary everyday life
might be less relevant than described in Graburn’s (2001) theory of tourism as a sacred
24
journey. Instead, the findings from this study reinforce the view that backpacking is a
suspension of everyday life (Richards & Wilson, 2004c). Practically, the findings suggest
some unique characteristics of Asian young travellers that are useful for the industry. For
example, the playful elements in Asian backpacking are less significant than those of Western
backpackers. The motivation for experience accumulation that contributes towards a better
future implies a need to design different types of product for this market.
This study has limitations that provide opportunities for further research. Future research can
investigate how male and female Asian backpackers differently perceive their travel
experience. Moreover, a longitudinal study may provide greater understanding on how Asian
backpackers reintegrate into their home society upon completion of their travel.
25
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Escape
Connection
- Spatial pressure
- Filial piety
- Temporal
pressure
- Identity
realisation
- Social pressure
- Better home
Figure 1. Interplay of escape from home and connection to home.
33