Dictionary Definition
hospitality n : kindness in welcoming guests or
strangers [syn: cordial
reception] [ant: inhospitality]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- The act or service of welcoming, receiving, hosting, or entertaining guests
- Please thank our hosts for their hospitality during the week that we stayed.
Translations
act or service
- Czech: pohostinnost , pohostinství i business
- Dutch: gastvrijheid
- Faroese: gestablídni , gestablíðskapur
- Finnish: vieraanvaraisuus
- German: Gastfreundlichkeit , Gastfreundschaft
- Kurdish:
- Latin: hospitalitas
- Norwegian: gjestfrihet
- Portuguese: hospitalidade
- Russian: гостепримство, радУшие
- Serbian: gostoprimstvo
- Spanish: hospitalidad
Extensive Definition
Hospitality refers to the relationship process
between a guest and a host, and it also refers to the act or
practice of being hospitable, that is, the reception and
entertainment of guests, visitors, or strangers, with liberality
and goodwill. Hospitality frequently refers to the hospitality
industry jobs for hotels,
restaurants, casinos, catering, resorts, clubs and any other
service position that deals with tourists.
Hospitality is also known as the act of
generously providing care and kindness to whomever is in
need.
Hospitality
For an in depth understanding of the term of hospitality, the starting point is the etymology of the word itself. The word hospitality derives from the Latin hospes, which is formed from hostis, which originally meant a 'stranger' and came to take on the meaning of the enemy or 'hostile stranger' (hostilis) + pets (polis, poles, potentia) to have power. Furthermore, the word hostire means equilize/compensate.If you combined the above etymological analysis
with the story of Telemachus and
Nestor
you can develop in your mind the Greek concept
of sacred hospitality.
First of all, Telemachus is a complete stranger
for Nestor, however he was hosted and treated more than warmly. In
the Homeric ages, hospitality was under the protection of Zeus. The
God of the Gods. For that reason Zeus was also attributed with the
title 'Xenios Zeus' ('xenos' means stranger). The semantic behind
this was to highlight the fact that hospitality for Ancient Greeks
was of the utmost importance. A stranger passing outside a Greek
house, could be invited inside the house by the family. The host
washed the strangers feet, offered him/her food and wine and only
after he/she was feeling at comfortably could be asked to tell
his/her name.
After having welcomed Telemachus, Nestor asks his
unknown guest to introduce himself to find out that he was the son
of Odysseus. By that time, the man in front of him was a complete
stranger, a hostis as described in the etymological analysis of
hospitality at the beginning. Nonetheless, Telemachus was equilized
with his host. Another meaning that is included in the etymology of
hospitality. Note also that one of the Nestor's sons slept on a bed
close by Telemachus to take care that he should not suffer any
harm. This means that hospitality for Ancient Greeks include also
the idea of protection. Lastly, Nestor put a chariot and horses at
Telemachus' disposal so that he could travel the land route from
Pylos to Sparta in two days, having as charioteer Nestor's son
Pisistratus. The last element of hospitality as can be realized is
guidance.
Based on the story above and its current meaning,
hospitality is about compensating/equalizing a stranger to the
host, making him feel protected and taken care of, and at the end
of his hosting, guiding him to his next destination.
Contemporary usage
Contemporary usage seems different from historical uses that lend it personal connotations. Today's hospitality conjures images of throwing good parties, gracious hosts entertaining, etiquette, Martha Stewart or even talk shows, or, the hospitality services industry as it relates to the entertainment and tourism business. On the other hand, hospitality used to be, and still is, a serious duty, responsibility, or ethic. Hospitality ethics is a discipline that studies this usage of hospitality.In the western context, with its dynamic tension
between Athens and Jerusalem, two phases can be distinguished with
a very progressive transition: a hospitality based on an
individually felt sense of duty, and one based on "official"
institutions for organized but anonymous social services: special
places for particular types of "strangers" such as the poor,
orphan(s), ill, alien, criminal, etc. Perhaps this progressive
institutionalization can be aligned to the transition between
Middle
Ages and Renaissance
(Ivan
Illich, The Rivers North of the Future).
Biblical and Middle Eastern
In Middle Eastern Culture, it was considered a cultural norm to take care of the strangers and foreigners living among you. These norms are reflected in many Biblical commands and examples.http://bible.gospelcom.net/passage/?search=Exodus%2022:21;23:9;%20Leviticus%2019:10,33,34;24:22;%20Deuteronomy%2010:18Perhaps the most extreme example is provided in
Genesis. Lot provides hospitality to a group of angels (who he
thinks are only men); when a mob tries to rape them, Lot goes so
far as to offer his own daughters as a substitute, saying "Don't do
anything to these men, for they have come under the protection of
my roof." (Genesis 19:8, NIV).
The obligations of both guests are stern. The
bond is formed by eating salt under the roof, and is so strict that
an Arab story tells of a thief who tasted something to see if it
was sugar, and on realizing it was salt, put back all that he had
taken and left.
Cultural value or norm
Hospitality as a cultural norm or value is an established sociological phenomenon that people study and write papers about (see references, and Hospitality ethics).See also
- Backpacking (travel)
- CouchSurfing
- Hospitality_Club
- Hostel
- Hospitality services, modern day hospitality networks.
- Hospitality ethics, Hospitality as a cultural norm, or behavioral standard.
- Motel
Further reading
Of Hospitality - Jacques Derrida, translated by Rachel Bowlby (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2000).References
- muse.jhu.edu
- journals.cambridge.org
- Hospitality ethics
- International Hospitality Fair
- Hospitality-Industry.com, raised by 2 former hotel school students in 1999, provides hospitality professionals and students access to a wide range of manually selected resources.
hospitality in German: Gastfreundschaft
hospitality in Spanish: Hospitalidad
hospitality in Hebrew: הכנסת אורחים
hospitality in Dutch: Gastvrijheid
hospitality in Finnish: Vieraanvaraisuus
hospitality in Chinese: 款待
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
admissibility, affability, amiability, amicability, ardency, assembly-line housing,
bigheartedness,
billeting, bonhomie, bounteousness, bountifulness, bounty, civility, clubbability, clubbishness, clubbism, commodiousness, communicativeness,
companionability,
compatibility,
congeniality,
convenience,
cordiality, courteousness, courtesy, coziness, cushioniness, domiciliation, doss, easiness, easy purse strings,
familiarity,
fondness for society, free hand, freedom, freehandedness, freeheartedness,
freeness, friendliness, generosity, generousness, geniality, givingness, graciousness, great heart,
greatheartedness,
gregariousness,
heartiness, homelikeness, homeliness, homeyness, housing, housing bill, housing
development, housing problem, intimacy, invitingness, largeheartedness,
largeness, largess, liberality, liberalness, living
quarters, lodging,
lodgment, lower-income
housing, luxuriousness, magnanimity, munificence, open hand, open
heart, openhandedness, openheartedness,
openness, peace, peacefulness, quartering, receptiveness, receptivity, recipience, reposefulness, restfulness, roominess, slum clearance,
snugness, sociability, sociableness, social grace,
sociality, softness, subdivision, tract, transient lodging, unselfishness, urban
renewal, urbanity,
warmheartedness,
warmness, warmth, welcome