The Liminal Leisure of Disadvantaged Young People in the UK Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic

被引:0
|
作者
Woodrow N. [1 ]
Moore K. [2 ]
机构
[1] School of Health and Related Research, University of Sheffield, Regent Court, S1 4DA, Sheffield
[2] School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, Newcastle University, King’s Gate, NEI 7RU, Newcastle upon Tyne
来源
Journal of Applied Youth Studies | 2021年 / 4卷 / 5期
基金
英国经济与社会研究理事会;
关键词
COVID-19; Liminal leisure; Lockdown; Young people;
D O I
10.1007/s43151-021-00064-2
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The global COVID-19 pandemic has created, exposed and exacerbated inequalities and differences around access to—and experiences and representations of—the physical and virtual spaces of young people’s leisure cultures and practices. Drawing on longstanding themes of continuity and change in youth leisure scholarship, this paper contributes to our understandings of ‘liminal leisure’ as experienced by some young people in the UK before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. To do this, we place primary pre-pandemic research on disadvantaged young people’s leisure spaces and practices in dialogue with secondary data on lockdown and post-lockdown leisure. Subsequently, we argue that existing and emergent forms of youth ‘leisure liminality’ are best understood through the lens of intersectional disadvantages. Specifically, pre-existing intersectional disadvantages are being compounded by disruptions to youth leisure, as the upheaval of the pandemic continues to be differentially experienced. To understand this process, we deploy the concept of liminal leisure spaces used by Swaine et al Leisure Studies 37:4,440-451, (2018) in their ethnography of Khat-chewing among young British Somali urban youth ‘on the margins’. Similarly, our focus is on young people’s management and negotiation of substance use ‘risks’, harms and pleasures when in ‘private-in-public’ leisure spaces. We note that the UK government responses to the pandemic, such as national and regional lockdowns, meant that the leisure liminality of disadvantaged young people pre-pandemic became the experience of young people more generally, with for example the closure of night-time economies (NTEs). Yet despite some temporary convergence, intersectionally disadvantaged young people ‘at leisure’ have been subject to a particularly problematic confluence of criminalisation, exclusion and stigmatisation in COVID-19 times, which will most likely continue into the post-pandemic future. © 2021, The Author(s).
引用
收藏
页码:475 / 491
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A systematic review of the mental health changes of children and young people before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Kauhanen, Laura
    Wan Mohd Yunus, Wan Mohd Azam
    Lempinen, Lotta
    Peltonen, Kirsi
    Gyllenberg, David
    Mishina, Kaisa
    Gilbert, Sonja
    Bastola, Kalpana
    Brown, June S. L.
    Sourander, Andre
    EUROPEAN CHILD & ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 32 (06) : 995 - 1013
  • [2] Mental health in clinically referred children and young people before and during the Covid-19 pandemic
    Kapil Sayal
    Christopher Partlett
    Anupam Bhardwaj
    Bernadka Dubicka
    Tamsin Marshall
    Julia Gledhill
    Colleen Ewart
    Marilyn James
    Alexandra Lang
    Kirsty Sprange
    Alan Montgomery
    European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2023, 32 : 2657 - 2666
  • [3] Mental health in clinically referred children and young people before and during the Covid-19 pandemic
    Sayal, Kapil
    Partlett, Christopher
    Bhardwaj, Anupam
    Dubicka, Bernadka
    Marshall, Tamsin
    Gledhill, Julia
    Ewart, Colleen
    James, Marilyn
    Lang, Alexandra
    Sprange, Kirsty
    Montgomery, Alan
    EUROPEAN CHILD & ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 32 (12) : 2657 - 2666
  • [4] Friendship buffering effects on mental health symptoms before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: A UK longitudinal study of young people with childhood adversity
    Konig, Maximilian
    Smith, Alicia J.
    Moreno-Lopez, Laura
    Davidson, Eugenia
    Dauvermann, Maria
    Orellana, Sofia
    Mccormick, Ethan M.
    Peris, Tara S.
    Kaser, Muzaffer
    Ioannidis, Konstantinos
    van Harmelen, Anne-Laura
    DEVELOPMENT AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, 2025,
  • [5] The Impact of the Covid-19 Pandemic on Lifestyle: How Young people have Adapted Their Leisure and Routine during Lockdown in Italy
    Panarese, Paola
    Azzarita, Vittoria
    YOUNG, 2021, 29 (4_SUPPL) : S35 - S64
  • [6] Young people’s romantic relationships and sexual activity before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Jennifer Yarger
    Abigail Gutmann-Gonzalez
    Sarah Han
    Natasha Borgen
    Martha J. Decker
    BMC Public Health, 21
  • [7] Young people's romantic relationships and sexual activity before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Yarger, Jennifer
    Gutmann-Gonzalez, Abigail
    Han, Sarah
    Borgen, Natasha
    Decker, Martha J.
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 21 (01)
  • [8] Innovating and contextualising career counselling for young people during the Covid-19 pandemic
    Maree, Jacobus Gideon
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 51 (02) : 244 - 255
  • [9] On break: young people and managing "empty time" during the Covid-19 pandemic
    Pitti, Ilaria
    SOCIETAMUTAMENTOPOLITICA-RIVISTA ITALIANA DI SOCIOLOGIA, 2022, 13 (26): : 83 - 92
  • [10] Young people and adolescents have more irregular meals during the COVID-19 pandemic: A nested case-control study on chrono-nutrition before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Saals, Bo
    Boss, H. Myrthe
    Pot, Gerda K.
    CHRONOBIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2022, 39 (07) : 991 - 1000