Power, Construction and Meaning in Festivals

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A01=Alan Clarke
A01=Allan Jepson
accessibility
Alan Clarke
Anne-Mette Hjalager
authenticity
Author_Alan Clarke
Author_Allan Jepson
Bullwhip Effect
Category=KNS
Category=WT
community event planning processes
Comte De Paris
Critical Management Approach
cultural sustainability
David Airey
David Jarman
Dimitrios P. Stergiou
Ego Network Analysis
Eirini Pehlivanidou
engagement sponsorship
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_travel
event construction
event management theory
event planning and design
Events and power theory
Festival Organisers
Festival Stakeholders
Festival Success
Glastonbury Festival
Gorski Kotar
Grzegorz Kwiatkowski
Hellenic Open University
Heritage Festival
Historical Interpretative Approach
Housing Fair
Ian Lamon
Icelandic Horse
infrastructure
Jelena rkin
Joanna Fountain
Karine Dupre
Leeds Beckett University
local communities
local governments
Local Sports Events
Managing Community Stakeholders
meaning
Michael Mackay
Mohamed Reda Khomsi
Multi-actor Environment
Nicholas Wise
organisers
Power Wrestling
qualitative event research
Raphaela Stadler
rural festival innovation
Rural Festivals
Ruth Dowson
SCM Field
Small Scale Sport Events
social inclusion
social inclusion strategies
Southeast Queensland
stakeholder engagement
stakeholder inclusion
Stephen Kelly
Sunshine Coast
Susanna Heldt Cassel
sustainability
Trudie Walters
W. Gerard Ryan
Young Man
Zoe White

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138063228
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Nov 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Whether through education, sport or festivity, events form the basis on which we attribute cultural meaning, significance and value to our lives. In this light, community events have the potential to create positive and negative social, cultural, economic and environmental impacts within the community across a wide variety of genres and platforms.

This book offers a deeper and more critical insight into the relationships, dynamics and planning processes of festivals and events and the impact this has upon authenticity, cultural consumption and the local communities they serve. It does so by looking at a range of key debates in power theory, event planning and design, event construction, experience and meaning, authenticity, sustainability, social inclusion, accessibility and sponsorship engagement. International case studies are embedded within the chapters, examining the role of stakeholders, local communities, organisers, local governments and infrastructure.

This critical event studies text is interdisciplinary and will make valuable reading for students and researchers who are interested in the relationships and dynamics involved in the construction and planning of festivals and events, their immediate impact and their significance for the future.

Allan Jepson, PhD, is an ex festival practitioner, A Nottingham Forest supporter and currently a senior lecturer and researcher in critical event studies (CES) at the University of Hertfordshire, UK. Allan has contributed widely to critical event studies literature within the realm of community festivals and events and has two key texts in this area (Exploring Community Festivals and Events and Managing and Developing Communities, Festivals and Events, both with Alan Clarke, University of Pannonia, Hungary). Allan’s current research interests include the role of inclusive / exclusive and sub-cultures within festivals and events, the cultural relationships of festival stakeholders and in particular local community(ies), the role of stakeholders in event production / construction and how these impact upon the consumption of cultural events and festivals, power, hegemony and decision making in local community festivals and events, the role of festivals and events as a catalyst for integrating culturally diverse communities, psychology and events; self and group efficacy and how this effects community engagement in event planning and consumption, knowledge management in events, community festivals and events and their impact on the quality of life (QOL) of individuals and families; and more recently arts participation and memory creation amongst the over 70s. Allan is currently collaborating in research with colleagues from AUT University, New Zealand and Leeds Beckett University, UK. Email: a.s.jepson@herts.ac.uk.

Alan Clarke works at the University of Pannonia in the Tourism Department of the Faculty of Business and Economics. He is a co-director of the Balaton Tourism Research Institute (known as BATUKI in Hungary) and works with stakeholder groups around the Lake and in the Balaton Highlands to promote the development of sustainable tourism in the region. He continues to work on critical events studies and hospitality. He is delighted that he has the Veszprém International Festival on his doorstep, which keeps him in touch with world-class organisation and world-class performers. He is also a visiting professor at the University of Derby in the UK and continues working on European projects, having just joined the launch of ‘The Wine Lab’ with partners from both the study of and the production of wine throughout Europe. Alan continues to publish widely, developing long-standing interests in sustainability and community development. He has contributed to many journals but is now taking on the responsibility of editor in chief for the recently launched International Journal of Spa and Wellness. His love of Sheffield Wednesday continues and confidence is at a new high as his subscription to a Hungarian channel showing Premiership Football demonstrates. But the true loves of his life, Ruth, Jamie, Dan and Alex, continue to delight and amaze as they grow older. Email: alanhungary@hotmail.com.

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