ABSTRACT

Festivals and events are of enormous significance to many communities around the world. They can have historic, religious, cultural and traditional significance, and they are also important parts of community building.

This book focuses on these small-scale, non-metropolitan events (i.e. rural, regional and peri-urban) to explore the complex relationships between place, community and identity and the ways in which festival events bring these into being. By drawing on the notion of ‘encounter’, this book examines how festivals and events can be seen primarily as spaces where different people meet. This notion of encounter helps us to understand how conviviality and social relations are developed, and what this then means in terms of social cohesion and social justice. It also draws on current theoretical and methodological approaches that can tell us about the role of festivals in contemporary life, and it includes the sensual approach, the geographies of affect and emotion, the notion of the right to the city and nonrepresentation theory.

The book brings together these perspectives and examines their relevance in the community events context, identifying and discussing theoretical frameworks drawn from (including but not limited to) human geography, sociology, anthropology, leisure studies and urban planning, as well as tourism and event studies. For these reasons, Festival Encounters will be a valuable read for students and academics working on a wide range of disciplines.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|11 pages

Approaches to festival research

chapter 3|9 pages

Encounter as our underpinning theory

chapter 4|12 pages

Rituals of community

Encounters of cohesion and subversion

chapter 5|13 pages

Mobilities and the shaping of encounter

chapter 7|9 pages

Festivals and social justice

chapter 9|10 pages

Festivals and social capital

chapter 10|11 pages

Encounter with past, present and future

Yakkerboo and the rural-urban fringe

chapter 11|10 pages

Experience! The Casey Multicultural Festival

Encounter with ‘the other’

chapter 12|13 pages

The Clunes Booktown Festival

Encounters with class mobilities

chapter 13|16 pages

The Noosa Jazz Festival

Encounter with the senses

chapter 14|3 pages

Conclusions