AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


Torping: When seemingly 'doing nothing', working and house ownership is part of tourism

Author

Term

4. term

Education

Publication year

2019

Submitted on

Pages

92

Abstract

Specialet undersøger fænomenet Torping: danskere, der ejer og bruger et svensk torp (en traditionel hytte), og de praksisser, der knytter sig til det. Torpet har gennemgået flere historiske faser – fra bondebolig til feriebolig – og har overlevet samfundsændringer. Undersøgelsen er kvalitativ og ser på nutidens hverdagspraksisser i og omkring torpet. Den placerer torping i forlængelse af andenbolig/feriebolig-ejerskab, som ofte ikke anerkendes som turisme, eller som i litteraturen beskrives med fokus på det ekstraordinære: det rurale, det “andet” og flugten fra hverdagen. Specialet udfordrer dette billede ved at anlægge en praksisorienteret, ikke-repræsentationel tilgang, der fokuserer på, hvad folk faktisk gør, snarere end hvordan de fortæller om det. Resultaterne viser, at tilsyneladende begivenhedsfattige handlinger som “at lave ingenting” og manuelt arbejde (fx at kløve brænde eller reparere) er helt centrale og værdsatte elementer i denne ferieform. Torping er heller ikke løsrevet fra det moderne; hverdagsgøremål og kløvet brænde findes side om side med iPads. Selvom rammen om andenboliger er anvendt, peger data på, at det er frugtbart at tænke i “flere hjem” frem for primært/sekundært: For mange informanter er torpet “et andet hjem” snarere end en sekundær adresse, og hverdagen er en del af torping – ikke noget, man nødvendigvis flygter fra.

This thesis examines the phenomenon of Torping: Danish nationals who own and use Swedish torp cabins and the practices that surround them. The torp has gone through several life cycles—shifting from peasant housing to a holiday home—while enduring social change. The study is qualitative and focuses on contemporary, everyday practices in and around the torp. It situates Torping within second-home ownership, which is often not recognized as tourism, or is described in the literature as an extraordinary experience emphasizing rural otherness and escape from the everyday. The thesis challenges this emphasis by taking a practice-oriented, non-representational approach that looks at what people actually do rather than how they narrate it. Findings show that seemingly uneventful activities like “doing nothing” and manual work (such as chopping firewood or making repairs) are central and valued parts of this kind of holiday. Torping is also not detached from modernity; everyday tasks and split firewood sit alongside iPads. While the second-home framework is used, the data suggest it is useful to think in terms of “multiple dwellings” rather than a strict primary/secondary split: for many informants, the torp is “another home,” and everyday life is part of Torping rather than something to escape.

[This abstract was generated with the help of AI]