ABSTRACT

Leisure is fundamental to understanding contemporary sexual and gendered identities, lives and communities. These identities, lives and communities are inherently spatialised. The overlaps and intersections of leisure and geographies in the study of the spatiality of sexuality, while undoubtedly fruitful, tend to be only sporadically registered. This book is a timely contribution to exploring the links between leisure studies and geographies to further develop analyses of space and the sexual.