Urban Nightscapes: Youth Cultures, Pleasure Spaces and Corporate PowerIn many western cities, urban nightlife is experiencing a 'McDonaldisation', where big branded names are taking over large parts of downtown areas, leaving consumers with an increasingly standardised experience. This book takes a new look at this rapidly changing aspect of urban life, examining the relationships between young adults, nightlife and city spaces. It focuses on what the authors call 'urban nightscapes' - both mainstream and alternative youthful cultural activities in bars, pubs, night-clubs and music venues, which occur against a backdrop of increasing corporate influence in the night-time economy. |
Contents
1 | |
Understanding nightlife processes and spaces producing regulating and consuming urban nightscapes ... | 17 |
Urban nightlife stories experiencing mainstream residual and alternative spaces | 91 |
Notes | 239 |
243 | |
269 | |
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Common terms and phrases
alcohol alternative nightlife areas argues Bar owner become beer behaviour brands brewers Bristol Café capital cent changes Chapter Chatterton and Hollands city centre city-centre city’s club cultures commercial companies consumer consumption context continue corporate nightlife create creative dance cultures dominant downtown drinking drugs emerged example experience Fordist free party gay village gender gentrified global groups hip hop identity increased increasingly industrial Interbrew labour market Leeds leisure lesbians lifestyle mainstream nightlife margins middle-class moral panics neo-tribes Newcastle upon Tyne night night-time economy nightclub nightlife activity nightlife cultures nightlife operators nightlife spaces nightlife venues organised ownership particular places play police postmodern premises production rave regulation role sanitised scene Scottish & Newcastle sector sexual social socialising spatial squatting squeegee kids street studentland style stylised themed traditional up-market urban nightlife urban nightscapes violence working-class young adults young professionals young women youth cultures