%0 Journal Article %T Reading hospitality mutually %A Anthony Ince %A Helen Bryant %J Environment and Planning D: Society and Space %@ 1472-3433 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/0263775818774048 %X This article addresses debates in geography regarding the nature and significance of hospitality. Despite increasingly inhospitable policy landscapes across the Global North, grassroots hospitality initiatives persist, including various global travel-based initiatives and networks. Drawing from research with these travel networks, we argue that hospitality is fundamentally based on a pervasive, mutualistic sociality in a multitude of forms. Such initiatives, and hospitality more generally, can be better understood in terms of their relationship to these wider mutualities. we therefore use Peter Kropotkin¡¯s anarchist-geographic concept of mutual aid ¨C in conversation with Jacques Derrida and other thinkers ¨C to reimagine hospitality as ¡®mutual hospitableness¡¯; systemic, spatio-temporally expansive and underpinned by a conception of self that is constituted through, and gains its vitality from, intertwinement with the other %K Anarchism %K hospitality %K Kropotkin %K mutual aid %K travel %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0263775818774048