首页> 外文OA文献 >Gender, class and 'binge' drinking : an ethnography of drinkers in Bournemouth's night-time economy
【2h】

Gender, class and 'binge' drinking : an ethnography of drinkers in Bournemouth's night-time economy

机译:性别,阶级和'狂欢'饮酒:伯恩茅斯夜间经济中饮酒者的民族志

代理获取
本网站仅为用户提供外文OA文献查询和代理获取服务,本网站没有原文。下单后我们将采用程序或人工为您竭诚获取高质量的原文,但由于OA文献来源多样且变更频繁,仍可能出现获取不到、文献不完整或与标题不符等情况,如果获取不到我们将提供退款服务。请知悉。

摘要

In early 21 SI-century Britain there is a focus by media, government and academia on young people's consumption of alcohol - often using the term 'binge' drinking - and how this should be understood and regulated. This thesis argues that contemporary forms of alcohol regulation can be seen as part of a broader neo-liberal mentality of government, encompassing the creation of a classed and gendered figure of the self-disciplined, responsible, ideal citizen. This ethnographic study of the night-time economy in Bournemouth, a town on the south coast of England, considers how young people's drinking practices and discussions relate to these discourses to constitute gender and class. The location and analytical focus of the study complement previous research, which has tended to be based in formerly industrial cities and has either emphasised similarities amongst young people or focused on how drinking practices reflect people's gender and class backgrounds. Interviews were conducted with 20 professionals alongside 45 hours of participant observation resulting in interactions with 113 drinkers. Drawing on the work of Butler and Bourdieu, this study conceives of gender and class as norms that structure people's perceptions of the world and possibilities within it; drinking practices and understandings are both part of these structures and also actions that lead to individuals being consequently classified. Young people's various 'drinking styles' can be arranged on a continuum from the everyday to the carnivalesque. The everyday style draws on the figure of the responsible individual noted in government discourses and oppositional figures such as the 'chav', which distance the speaker from problematic 'binge' drinking in class terms. Other participants labelled such views 'stuck up', as part of a symbolic struggle. In terms of gender, themes of safekeeping interacted with these discourses, as certain practices were considered unfeminine and not 'classy', for example. The thesis argues that, as well as reflecting class and gender, these styles can be seen as discursive resources that authorise accounts of drinking, constituting symbolic capital and therefore class and gender. It is thus argued that the night-time economy is a key site for the formation of class and gender in contemporary British society.
机译:在21世纪SI初期的英国,媒体,政府和学术界都将重点放在年轻人的饮酒上-通常使用“暴饮暴食”一词-以及如何理解和管理这种饮酒。本论文认为,当代形式的酒精管制可以被视为更广泛的新自由主义政府思想的一部分,其中包括建立一个自律,负责,理想的公民的阶级化和性别化的人物。这项关于英格兰南部海岸小镇伯恩茅斯夜间经济的人种学研究,考虑了年轻人的饮酒习惯和讨论如何与这些话语联系起来,从而构成了性别和阶级。该研究的地点和分析重点是对以前研究的补充,该研究通常位于以前的工业城市,并且强调年轻人之间的相似性,或者着重于饮酒习惯如何反映人们的性别和阶级背景。与20名专业人员进行了访谈,并进行了45小时的参与者观察,与113名饮酒者进行了互动。这项研究借鉴了巴特勒和布迪厄的工作,将性别和阶级视为构成人们对世界及其内在可能性的看法的规范。饮酒习惯和理解既是这些结构的一部分,也是导致个人因此被分类的行为。从日常生活到狂欢节,可以将年轻人的各种“饮酒风格”安排在一个连续的范围内。日常风格借鉴了政府话语中负责任的个人的形象以及诸如“ chav”之类的对立人物,这使演讲者与班级上有问题的“暴饮暴食”保持距离。其他参与者将这种观点标记为“卡住”,这是象征性斗争的一部分。就性别而言,保管主题与这些论述相互影响,例如,某些做法被认为是女性化的,而不是“经典”的。本文认为,这些风格不仅反映阶级和性别,而且可以看作是话语资源,可以授权饮酒,构成象征性资本,因此可以构成阶级和性别。因此,有人认为夜间经济是当代英国社会中阶级和性别形成的重要场所。

著录项

  • 作者

    Haydock William;

  • 作者单位
  • 年度 2009
  • 总页数
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 English
  • 中图分类

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号