2017
DOI: 10.1080/09669582.2017.1360316
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Should there be more showers at the summer music festival? Studying the contextual dependence of resource consuming conventions and lessons for sustainable tourism

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Cited by 17 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
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“…Showering is one of many resource-intensive practices in Western everyday life, with profound environmental consequences, and previous research into the habits of bathing and showering has also taken practice theoretical approaches (Browne et al, 2014;Gram-Hanssen, 2007;Hand et al, 2005;Hitchings et al, 2018). Hand et al (2005) were interested in understanding why showering has become so popular compared with bathing over the last decades and approach this through a material, a cultural and a temporal perspective.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Showering is one of many resource-intensive practices in Western everyday life, with profound environmental consequences, and previous research into the habits of bathing and showering has also taken practice theoretical approaches (Browne et al, 2014;Gram-Hanssen, 2007;Hand et al, 2005;Hitchings et al, 2018). Hand et al (2005) were interested in understanding why showering has become so popular compared with bathing over the last decades and approach this through a material, a cultural and a temporal perspective.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, the role of peer pressure from friends and schoolmates is seen as part of how teenagers learned the rules of cleanliness, such as the daily showering, especially related to the norm of not smelling of sweat (Gram-Hanssen, 2007). Finally, a fourth study investigates how, during summer music festivals, temporarily new cultures of cleanliness evolve, as young people who usually shower daily may accept several days without performing this cleanliness practice (Hitchings et al, 2018). This paper poses the question: if these music festivals may contribute to a broader sustainability agenda, the festivals can also contribute to raising questions about the normal, resource-intensive cleanliness regime.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Food waste source separation has been highlighted as a major area of waste sorting at festivals, especially in terms of the packaging of retailed food and drink, requiring waste production practices at both the canteen facilities and the venue at large [13]. The supply chains of festival goods and facilities should also be effectively communicated with and coordinated in the waste management at the festivals [14]. The importance of effective indicators assessing waste management efficiency and performance is also stressed [15].…”
Section: Waste Sorting At Festivalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Practitioners change their relationship with cleanliness conventions in different contexts. For example, it is fine, even liberating, to be dirty at a summer festival, while at the office cleanliness is more important, and dirtiness is seen as shameful (Hitchings et al., 2018). Media could provide a demonstration site, so not only the reproducer and influencer of a convention, but also a specific site.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%