‘Playing with space': a conceptual basis for investigating active sport tourism practices

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Ressource 1Download: AcceptedManuscript_withcorrections19dec.pdf (273.20 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: Author's accepted manuscript
Serval ID
serval:BIB_D5BDA6523C1C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
‘Playing with space': a conceptual basis for investigating active sport tourism practices
Journal
Journal of Sport & Tourism
Author(s)
Geffroy Valérian
ISSN
1477-5085 (Print)
1029-5399 (Online)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
29/12/2016
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Pages
NA
Language
english
Abstract
This paper proposes a conceptual tool, the expression ‘playing with space’, for the analysis of active sport tourism as a meaningful social practice. The expression issues from practice theories and pragmatic understandings of space, which emphasize the processual and contextual dimensions of human action and seek to seize altogether the corporealities and shared conceptions that constitute action. On such views, sport tourists are considered as reflexive and embodied beings, enjoying sensations, mobilities and places, and constantly (re)making sense of their own practices. I argue that the notion of ‘play’ allows for a comprehensive understanding of the ways active sport tourists engage with space, where space is viewed as an object or material for this play. Three major dimensions of active sport tourism are then identified: a set of playful and game-like practices with global space resulting in shared imaginaries and large-scale mobilities; a kinaesthetic play, based on freedom and sensations and deeply engaged in the materiality of the places and the omnipresent media practices that support the other dimensions of play while being fully integrated into the experience of sport tourism. This conceptual framework is a way to better understand the motives and practices of sport tourists; it is also a way to underline wider trends of contemporary leisure cultures: such cultures are increasingly integrated into the daily spheres of activity, increasingly playful and increasingly mediatized.
Keywords
play, space, practice, sport tourism, theory
Open Access
Yes
Create date
03/01/2017 12:01
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:55
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