ABSTRACT

From bingo in the United Kingdom to slots in Las Vegas and Sydney, to `jambo' in Cameroon, gambling is a feature of societies across the world. Gambling Cultures explores the complex relationship between cash and culture as gambling emerges as a global phenomenon. Traditional accounts of gambling's pleasures and dangers talk in terms of addiction, compulsion, greed and profit. By contrast, this work focuses on modern gambling as it has emerged as a commercial industry, analyzing the ambiguous relationship between morality and risk taking and studies the contradictory stance of governments. Providing a range of case studies from Africa, Australia, the USA and Europe, Gambling Cultures offers a unique, comparative framework for the historical and cultural analysis of contemporary gambling practices.

chapter |5 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 1|34 pages

UNDERSTANDING GAMBLING

chapter 2|20 pages

GAMBLING AND THE LEGALISATION OF VICE

chapter 3|19 pages

SOCIAL EVIL OR SOCIAL GOOD?

chapter 4|14 pages

ILLEGAL BETTING IN BRITAIN AND AUSTRALIA

chapter 5|14 pages

WHEN IT’S BAD IT’S BETTER

chapter 7|15 pages

BINGO IN BRITAIN

chapter 9|11 pages

GAMBLING IN CAMEROON AND SENEGAL

chapter 11|22 pages

A SIGN OF THE TIMES

chapter 14|23 pages

FROM GLAMOUR TO GRIND