ABSTRACT

Attempting an affective and post-qualitative examination of the glocal conditions of state-stimulated capitalism that perpetuates injustice in domestic leisure spaces, we detail a specific space—the first author’s next-door neighbour’s lawn. As a contentious locale, the global social, economic and political forces contracted towards a racial delirium of paranoiac and schizophrenic affects. Ultimately, we reconceive how we live within everyday, domestic, leisure spaces and invite readers to wrestle with us as we invoke various feelings related to how we might playfully engage these spaces to interfere in everyday injustice.