File #2650: "2019_Book_DeviantLeisure.pdf"

2019_Book_DeviantLeisure.pdf

Testo

1|Contents|7
1|Notes on Contributors|10
1|List of Figures|14
1|List of Tables|15
1|1: Introduction: Why Leisure?|16
2|References|27
1|Part I: Theoretical Perspectives|29
2|2: The Deviant Leisure Perspective: A Theoretical Introduction|30
3|Reclaiming ‘Deviant’ Leisure|30
3|Does Leisure Exist in Late-Capitalism?|34
3|Ultra-Realism, Consumerism and Motivation|41
3|Leisure Futures: Towards the Pro-social|46
3|Conclusion|52
3|References|53
2|3: What Lies Beneath? Some Notes on Ultra-realism, and the Intellectual Foundations of the ‘Deviant Leisure’ Perspective|58
3|What Is Ultra-realism?|58
3|Background|62
3|Critical Realism|65
3|Deviant Leisure and Ultra-Realism|72
3|Conclusion|75
3|References|76
2|4: Consumptive and Non-Consumptive Leisure and Its Fit with Deviance|79
3|A Leisure Studies Perspective on Leisure Commodification|80
3|Forms of Leisure|81
3|Deviant Consumption|83
3|Non-Consumptive Leisure|85
3|Non-Deviant, Non-Consumptive Casual Leisure|86
3|Non-Deviant, Non-Consumptive Serious Leisure|87
3|Deviant Serious Leisure|92
3|The Harm in Leisure|93
3|Harm and the SLP|94
3|Conclusions|95
3|References|96
2|5: Real Ultras and Ultra Realism: Deviant Leisure Cultures, High Theory and Raw Realism|98
3|Real Ultras|99
3|Ultras and the Futurism of the Moment|101
3|Claustropolitanism and Deviant Leisure Cultures|103
3|The Dialectics of Deviant Leisure and the Red and Black Bloc|105
3|Conclusion|110
3|Bibliography|111
1|Part II: Consuming Harm|114
2|6: ‘Be More VIP’: Deviant Leisure and Hedonistic Excess in Ibiza’s ‘Disneyized’ Party Spaces|115
3|Introduction|116
3|Ibiza as a ‘Disneyized’ Space|119
4|Theming|121
4|Branding (and Merchandising)|125
4|Hybrid Consumption|133
4|Performative Labour|136
3|Conclusion|139
3|References|141
2|7: Substance Use in the Night-Time Economy: Deviant Leisure?|145
3|The Changing Nature of Substance Use and the Night-Time Economy|147
3|Substance Use and the Night-Time Economy: The Cultural Injunction to Enjoy|150
3|Substance Use in the Night-Time Economy: A Deviant Form of Leisure?|154
3|The Night-Time Economy: Contested Zones of Intoxication and Exclusion|157
3|Conclusion|160
3|References|162
2|8: Lifestyle Drugs and Late Capitalism: A Topography of Harm|171
3|Introduction|171
3|Researching the (Illicit) Trade in Pharmaceutical Enhancement|173
3|Theoretical Framework|175
3|Deviance, Leisure and Lifestyle Drugs: A Preliminary Map of the Harm|183
3|Conclusion: Lifestyle Drugs and Late-Capitalist Ideology|190
3|References|192
2|9: ‘The Fittest on Earth’: Performance and Image Enhancing Drugs Use Within UK CrossFit Communities|197
3|Characteristics of CrossFitters: ‘We Love CrossFit’|204
3|‘Do You Even Supplement?’|206
3|PIED Use and CrossFit|207
3|Body Image: ‘Strong Is the New Skinny’|209
3|Discussion|211
3|Conclusion|215
3|References|216
1|Part III: Digital Harms|222
2|10: From Edge Work to Death Drive: The Pursuit of Pleasure and Denial of Harm in a Leisure Society|223
3|Introduction|223
3|An Atlas of the Cultural Substrate|225
3|The Edges of Our Culture|228
3|The Murder Box|230
3|Networks, Technologies and Harms|234
3|Leisure Societies and Networked Harm: The Challenge for Criminology|239
3|Conclusion|241
3|References|242
2|11: The Business of Resistance: Feminist Pornography and the Limits of Leisure Industries as Sites of Political Resistance|245
3|From Incorporation to Precorporation|246
3|Precorporation|249
4|Pre-Shoot Logistics: Recruiting, Hiring and Promotion|250
4|Managing the Sexual Encounter: Performance, Affect and Consumption|252
3|Hypercorporation|255
4|Products|256
4|Production|257
3|Conclusion|261
3|References|263
2|12: Lifestyle Gambling in Accelerated Culture|266
3|The Contemporary Lifestyle Gambler|270
3|Lifestyle Gambling, Jouissance and the Technological Unconscious|273
3|Social Media Tipsters and Infantilised Lifestyle Gambling|278
3|The Cultural Desublimation of Money|280
3|Conclusion|285
3|References|286
1|Part IV: Environmental Harms|290
2|13: Loving the Planet to Death: Tourism and Ecocide|291
3|Introduction|291
3|Sustainable What?|294
3|Ecocide and Tourism|299
3|The Attractions of Environmental Destruction|301
3|Greenwashing the Long-Term Consequences|304
3|Hope in the Midst of Despair|307
3|Conclusion|308
3|References|309
2|14: Luxury, Tourism and Harm: A Deviant Leisure Perspective|311
3|‘Canned’ Hunting|316
3|Status Destinations|320
3|Conclusion|326
3|References|327
2|15: Conspicuously ‘Doing’ Charity: Exploring the Relationship Between Doing Good and Doing Harm in Tourism|330
3|Background|330
3|Examining the Popularity of Charity-Based Tourism|334
3|The Problems of Charity-Based Tourism: Too Good to Be True?|337
3|Charity-Based Tourism: A Deviant Leisure Perspective|342
3|References|346
1|Part V: Harmful Spaces, Harmful Places|351
2|16: The Paradox of Parkour: Conformity, Resistance and Spatial Exclusion|352
3|Introduction|352
3|Rethinking Parkour as Resistance|356
3|The Labour of Leisure: Parkour in a ‘Prosumer’ Economy|365
3|‘Sorry Lads’ (But I’ve Got to Move You on): Parkour’s Spatial Exclusion in the Late Capitalist City|372
3|Conclusion|375
3|References|375
2|17: Urban Exploration as Deviant Leisure|381
3|Urban Exploration as ‘Resistance’?|385
3|Urban Exploration as Deviant Leisure|389
3|Trespass™: Urban Exploration Commodified|391
3|Consumer Subjectivities|393
3|Social Media and the ‘Will to Represent’|395
3|Conclusion|399
3|References|399
2|18: Holiday Camps, Prison Time and Confined Escapism: Understanding Leisure, Pleasure and Harm in Prisons|404
3|Introduction|404
3|Doing Prison Ethnography|407
3|Prison Time and Inertia|408
3|Prison Leisure and Confined Escapism|410
4|Cellular Leisure|411
4|Regulated Leisure|412
4|Institutionalised Leisure|414
4|‘The Devil Makes Work for Idle Hands’|415
3|Conclusion|421
3|References|422
1|Index|425