1st Edition

Reimagining Community Festivals and Events Critical and Interdisciplinary Perspectives

242 Pages 33 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

242 Pages 33 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

242 Pages 33 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book celebrates and builds on Alan Clarke (1956–2021) and Allan Jepson’s 2015 book Exploring Community Festivals and Events . It showcases how far the study of community festivals and events has come in the intervening years, and in so doing it is a response to recent calls for researchers to take a more critical approach to event studies. This is an interdisciplinary book that draws... Read more

1. Understanding the Complex Nexus of Interdisciplinary Research in Community Festivals and Events

Allan Stewart Jepson, Raphaela Stadler and Trudie Walters

 

Part I. Reviving and Maintaining Tradition(s)

 

2. Small-scale Community-led Carnival Festivals on a Mission: Reviving Local Heritage and Community Benefits

Fiona Eva Bakas, Maria Psimouli and Stella Kladou

 

3. Beyond the Band and Game: The Sociocultural Impact of a Historically Black College and University Homecoming Experience

Kristine M. Fleming and Nikki L. Lyons

 

4. Factors Influencing Changes to Traditional Folklore and Cultural Festivals

Rajesh Nautiyal and Stu Hayes

 

Part II. A Focus for Belonging

 

5. Formation and Sustaining of Neo-tribes: Anchoring Place and Event

Kubra Asan and Ebru Bingol

 

6. Let's Put Up a Stage: Experiencing Speyfest, a Celtic Music Festival in Scotland

Daithí Kearney and Adèle Commins

 

Part III. Challenges and Tensions

 

7. Putting the "Multi" in Multicultural: Challenges in Representing Diversity Through Community Festivals and Events

David McGillivray and Trudie Walters

 

8. "Sounds a Bit Poncy for Me": Understanding Elitism Within a Community Arts Festival

Trudie Walters

 

Part IV. Innovation in Teaching and Research

 

9. Measuring Attitudinal Change in Community Light Festivals 

Mandy Curtis and Adam Jones

 

10. Becoming, Being…Belonging? Using Collaborative Autoethnography to Explore Community Events and Festivals.

Raphaela Stadler and Philipp Wegerer

 

11. Teaching Community Events, Power and Empowerment to Final Year Event Management Students: Pedagogical Considerations and Reflections

Raphaela Stadler  

Biography

Allan Stewart Jepson, PhD, is a multi/ interdisciplinary researcher following a track on well-being in contemporary leisure experiences; this has included research into power and hegemonic relationships, community festivals and events, social inclusion, festival and event memories, gerontology, and neurodiversity. Allan continues to build teams to investigate the complexity of physiological, psychological and sociological paradigms which influence long-term well-being. He is an advocate for change, equity and inclusion of neurodivergent populations.

Raphaela Stadler is Associate Professor for Tourism and Event Management at Management Centre Innsbruck (MCI), Austria. She is currently working on several multidisciplinary research projects to better understand the sociological and psychological impacts contemporary leisure experiences (festivals, events and tourism) have upon individuals, families and communities. Her specific research interests and areas of expertise include community events and festivals, community cultural development, power and empowerment, well-being and quality of life.

Trudie Walters is a critical event studies researcher from Aotearoa, New Zealand. Her research platform is centred on events and leisure as interdisciplinary lenses through which to understand the inner workings and values of society. She serves on the editorial board of a number of top academic leisure and events journals and is a board member and past president of the Australia and New Zealand Association for Leisure Studies.