Cover image for Postmigrant Club Cultures in Urban Europe
Postmigrant Club Cultures in Urban Europe
Title:
Postmigrant Club Cultures in Urban Europe
Author:
Kosnick, Kira.
ISBN:
9783653031553
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Frankfurt : Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, 2014.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (164 pages)
Contents:
Cover; Table of Contents; Introduction: New (Post- )Migrant Socialities -- Ethnic Club Cultures in Urban Europe (Kira Kosnick); Second Modernity; Structural Factors of Marginalization; The Culturalist Response: Migrant Identities; Post-migrant Club Scenes; Methodology; Literature; 'Moving on up?' Navigating Through Urban Nightlife as a 'Racialised' Body: The Case of the Young British Asian in London (Harpreet Kaur Cholia); Introduction; The Importance of Exploring British Asian Club Scenes; Development of British Asian Clubbing; Location of Club Scenes in London; The West End.

Going out to 'Central': Factors/Restraints People Need to Consider when Going Out There'Our money is just as good as yours!': 'The City' -- for the Young Urban Asian Professional; 'We Are in a Class of Our Own!?'; 'Staying Local'; Spaces in Progress ... The Case of Ealing and Staying Along the 'Uxbridge Road'; Conclusion; Literature; Appropriating the banlieue through Leisure: The Social and Spatial Dimensions of French Caribbean Clubbing in Paris (Sabina Rossignoli); Introduction; Urban studies and privilege over the banlieue.

Living in the banlieue: histories of migration and the gentrification of the cityClubbing and mobilities: RER trips and the symbolic Caribbean; Socialities and consumption: possible avenues for the study of the banlieues?; Ethnography of clubbing; Conclusion; Literature; On the Move! The Rise of a Black LGBT*Q Clubbing Scene in Paris and Negotiations within the Coloniality of the City (Vanessa Thompson); Introducing Coloniality to Spatial Processes; Research Context; Colonial Space Dimensions in Contemporary France; The Black LGBT*Q Clubbing Scene in Paris-It's a Family Thing.

The Challenge of Appropriating SpaceSpatial location matters!; Literature; 'It's All Ours': Race, Space and Place in the LGBTQ British-'Asian' Dance Club Scene in London (Heidi Hoefinger); Introduction; Research objectives and methods; Mapping the scene; Club Krishna; Club Spice; Club Herza; Club Tum; Findings; Queer Migrations and Urban Space; Phases of Clubbing as Part of a Lifecycle; Relationship between social networks in the context of clubbing and family; Contested Spaces; Conclusion; Literature; Notes on Contributors.
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