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ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL
FOR PAPERS
In
the apt setting of Liverpool during its year as European Capital
of Culture, the 2008 Leisure
Studies Association Conference seeks to appeal to a wide audience
of academics, researchers and practitioners. The conference themes
offer participants an opportunity for engagement with, analysis
and critique of key
current issues salient to a broad range of concerns in leisure
studies. The conference is open to LSA Members and non-members.
Contact the conference organising team at LSA2008@ljmu.ac.uk
to submit your proposal, register interest or request further
information. |
SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS
Please e-mail
your proposal as early as possible to the Conference Committee at LSA2008@ljmu.ac.uk
Submissions will continue to be considered subject to the
availability of appropriate space on the programme.
Please submit according to Guidelines
for Proposals |
CONFERENCE THEMES -- proposals are invited
on the following main themes
| Capitalising on culture |
This theme is embedded in the wider discourse of
the use of the cultural industries for regeneration purposes
in the so-called 'post-industrial' world, and to that end, invites
cross-cultural comparisons. The central premise of the theme
lies in an examination of the role of the cultural industries,
their relation to leisure and tourism and ideas and practices
of regeneration. Specifically, the theme wishes to address the
dynamic between the cultural industries and their appropriation
for regeneration purposes; the politics of 'trading' on and with
culture; and socially embedded practices of place and memory,
for example psychogeographies of leisure and tourism. Theme
Leader: Dr. Hazel Andrews |
Keynote speaker:
Dr. Gaynor Bagnall |
Substance or surface?
Sustainability in leisure and tourism |
The appearance and the image of a locality may
change with regeneration but who are the beneficiaries? This
theme will examine how regeneration initiatives impact the lives
of ordinary residents, and how the 'worth' of different cultures
might be decided. Is place marketing and the cultural industries
appropriating cultures to produce a place product? Is the quality
of life of residents being improved? This theme addresses issues
of belonging and inclusiveness, identity and the winners and
losers of place marketing and regeneration. Theme Leader:
Dr. Mark Meadows |
Keynote Speaker:
Dr. Greg Richards |
| Image, performance and identity in leisure, tourism
and sport |
Leisure, sport and tourism have long provided means
for individuals and groupsto create/express their identity through
leisure practices. In a literal sense, in tourist destinations
there is an expanding engagement with performance to present
history and heritage, festivals, music, and the creation of spectacle.
The time-travel metaphor has become a prominent feature of the
heritage industry and is intrinsically linked to escapism, nostalgia
and identity -- all key themes in leisure and tourism strategies.
Performativity in general has gained importance in the leisure
literature, both as a metaphor and as an approach to analysing
the embodied encounters of 'place consumers' in a locality. This
theme will explore the many ways in which performance, performativity,
and identity take centre stage in leisure, tourism and sport
practices. Theme Leader: Dr. Martin Selby |
Keynote Speaker:
Prof. David Crouch |
| Culture, consumption and community well being |
The complex relationship between culture, community
and community well-being will be explored, reflecting the wide
ranging impacts of health & well being both individual, family
and community wide. The role of tourism and leisure both as industry
and civic activity and lifestyles can be explored from a diverse
range of view points such as education (formal and social), planning
(towns, homes, workplaces destinations) and (social) marketing
of both destinations and lifestyles (behaviours). This theme
will also invite participants to explore the 'discovery' of culture
as a key element of community development through such areas
as cultural strategy development, 24 hour living, destination/cultural
tourism marketing, cultural economic policy and 'measuring' culture
health and well being. Theme Leader: Dr Allan Hackett |
Keynote Speaker:
Prof. Gareth Stratton |
Centre
for Tourism, Consumer and Food Studies, LSA 2008 Conference Committee
members:
Conference Chair: Deborah
Pownall; Phillip Williamson; Julie Abayomi; Dr Hazel Andrews;
Dr Jennifer Miller; Steve Burns; Dr Ian Davies; Dr Diane Grant;
Dr Allan Hackett; Dr Claire Hennessey; Jo Ives; Drew Li; Dr Martin
Selby; Dr Mark Meadows; Ann Thomson; Jackie Richards; Dr Leo
Stevenson. Others involved: PHD Researcher: Martin Hudson, Liverpool
Business School, LJMU; Ken Longden: School of Media, Critical
and Creative Arts, LJMU; Dr Gaynor Bagnall: Sociology Department,
University of Salford; Sarah Nixon: Centre for Sport Development,
LJMU; Dr Don Cock Centre for PE, Sport and Dance, LJMU; Administrator:
Liz Kerr. |
This page updated
January 24, 2008 Myrene McFee mcfee@solutions-inc.co.uk
The LeisureStudies Association
is a Registered Charity No. 294997 |
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