ABSTRACT

This book analyses the concept of community by critically exploring its many manifestations in leisure.  It unpacks patterns of mutuality, collective expression, and belonging as they emerge through interaction, shared narrative, and practice.

Recognizing that our experiences of “being in common” and “being in leisure” require rethinking in a changed modernity, the book illustrates the myriad ways that leisure communities take form and shape in the current economic, political, and ideological moment. It highlights how changing societal expectations, economic conditions, technological innovations, and ideological shifts set the stage for a reformulation of social relations and emergence of new leisure-based social groupings. The authors question how to make sense of new social expressions, at times offering unexpected and completely new ways of theorizing community.

Global in richness and scope, the book offers a rich and composite view regarding how to take up and theorize leisure in relation to the multiple dimensions of community. It will inspire a new generation of readers in a broad range of areas across the social sciences, including sociology, community studies, leisure studies, and planning.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Are leisure communities really communities?

part I|64 pages

Locating community in 21st century leisure

part II|66 pages

Community and playful performance

chapter 8|9 pages

Placemaking in the playful city

Playing in and playing with the urban environment

chapter 9|11 pages

Better singers together

How older Japanese women build and maintain social relations in karaoke classrooms

chapter 10|11 pages

Together apart

Second home leisure communities in New Zealand

chapter 11|10 pages

Performing community

A case study of the yoga experiences of rural New Zealand men

chapter 12|13 pages

Parisite lost

The utopian decline of a DIY skatepark

part III|57 pages

Leisure communities and their impacts

chapter 13|11 pages

Pipe-dreams and utopian visions

Blending community and high performance sport in New Zealand cycling and gymnastics

chapter 14|12 pages

Inside out

The role(s) of leisure in the endogenous and exogenous pathways to social capital

chapter 17|10 pages

Resisting, reproducing, and recreating rurality

Leisure in contemporary rural communities