This article examines Australian women’s complex relationship with the beach through a focus on affect and on what bodies do. Interviews with ten participants of diverse backgrounds and of different ages reveal that women understand the beach as a mediated and surveilled space where their bodies are foregrounded. In this environment, there is an intersection of women’s knowledge of the popular constructions of the archetypal Australian beach body, real women’s bodies, and interviewees’ experiences of the beach as a place of shame and pride. As a means of managing this affective landscape participants detail a range of bodily strategies enacted prior to going to the beach and once at the beach. This bodily labour demonstrates that for Austra...
The Australian beach is frequently positioned as an integral component of international tourist camp...
The Australian beach is now accepted as a significant part of Australian national culture and identi...
Australian national identity has a long history of being intrinsically tied with the landscape. The ...
Taking up the stance that every body in swimwear is a beach body, this PhD project dealt with women'...
International and national representations of the beach perpetuate normative female concepts by main...
Australia, internationally, is known as a beach loving country, particularly in popular culture. The...
© 2016 Representations of tourism subjects, both people and places, extend beyond specifically touri...
Beaches in Australia are signified with meaning. âThe beachâ is a cultural centrepiece that contribu...
While it is acknowledged that the tourist experience is embodied, few researchers have considered ho...
Australian national identity has a long history of being intrinsically tied with landscape, and this...
This research undertakes to examine factors that contribute to make Australian national and cultural...
The natural beach environment - the hot sand and glistening surf - or at the very least lapping wave...
Walking and Australian beaches go hand-in-hand. At any time of the day throughout the year people wi...
It was not until the early 1900s that the Australian beach first emerged as a western recreational s...
The Australian beach is a significant element of our national identity. Since the majority of the po...
The Australian beach is frequently positioned as an integral component of international tourist camp...
The Australian beach is now accepted as a significant part of Australian national culture and identi...
Australian national identity has a long history of being intrinsically tied with the landscape. The ...
Taking up the stance that every body in swimwear is a beach body, this PhD project dealt with women'...
International and national representations of the beach perpetuate normative female concepts by main...
Australia, internationally, is known as a beach loving country, particularly in popular culture. The...
© 2016 Representations of tourism subjects, both people and places, extend beyond specifically touri...
Beaches in Australia are signified with meaning. âThe beachâ is a cultural centrepiece that contribu...
While it is acknowledged that the tourist experience is embodied, few researchers have considered ho...
Australian national identity has a long history of being intrinsically tied with landscape, and this...
This research undertakes to examine factors that contribute to make Australian national and cultural...
The natural beach environment - the hot sand and glistening surf - or at the very least lapping wave...
Walking and Australian beaches go hand-in-hand. At any time of the day throughout the year people wi...
It was not until the early 1900s that the Australian beach first emerged as a western recreational s...
The Australian beach is a significant element of our national identity. Since the majority of the po...
The Australian beach is frequently positioned as an integral component of international tourist camp...
The Australian beach is now accepted as a significant part of Australian national culture and identi...
Australian national identity has a long history of being intrinsically tied with the landscape. The ...