ABSTRACT

The development of the festival and event industry has seen large scale growth and extensive government support as a result of objectives to enhance and project the image of place and leverage positive sponsorship and regeneration opportunities. As we move deeper into austerity measures prompted by economic recession, community festivals and events as a sacred or profane time of celebration can be considered even more important than ever before.

This book for the first time explores the role and importance of ‘community’, ‘culture’ and its impact through festivals and events. Split into two distinct sections, the first introduces key themes and concepts, contextualises local traditions and culture, and investigates how festivals and events can act as a catalyst for tourism and create a sense of community. It then questions the social and political nature of festivals and community events through examining their ownership. The second section focuses on communities themselves, seeking to examine and discuss key emerging themes in community event studies such as; the role of diaspora, imagined communities, pride and identity, history, producing and consuming space and place, authenticity, and multi-ethnic communities.  Examples are drawn from Portugal, the Dominican Republic, the USA, Malaysia, Malta, Finland and Australia making this book truly international.

This significant volume will be valuable reading for students and academics across the fields of Event, Tourism and Hospitality studies as well as other social science disciplines.

chapter |14 pages

Organic festivity

A missing element of community festival

chapter |23 pages

Experiencing community festivals and events

Insights from Finnish summer festivals

chapter |12 pages

Festivals and sense of community in places of transition

The Yakkerboo Festival, an Australian case study

chapter |13 pages

New and old tourism traditions

The case of Skieda in Livigno, Italian Alps

chapter |13 pages

‘Whose festival?'

Examining questions of participation, access and ownership in rural festivals

chapter |11 pages

‘Wha's like us?'

Scottish Highland Games in America and the identity of the Scots' diaspora

chapter |12 pages

Football on the weekend

Rural events and the Haitian imagined community in the Dominican Republic

chapter |7 pages

Community events in nationalist political environments

The case of the Portuguese Estado Novo

chapter |20 pages

‘Something greater than the sum of its parts'

Narratives of sense of place at a community multicultural festival

chapter |12 pages

Open house food catering

Does it destroy local culture and traditions? A perspective from Malaysia

chapter |10 pages

‘Taste'-ing festivals

Understanding constructions of rural identity through community festivals

chapter |15 pages

Swiss and Italian identities

Exploring heritage, culture and community in regional Australia

chapter |12 pages

The Pozières Son et Lumière

Peace and memory after the Great War

chapter |14 pages

End of the rainbow?

A review of community events in Liverpool