This article details the particular commodification of those high risk, high adrenalin activities known collectively as ‘extreme sports’. A variety of commercial operators now offer relative sporting neophytes the chance to take part in mountaineering, snow boarding or canyonning adventures that are billed as being ‘high thrill, low risk’. It is the way in which the risk and danger involved in these activities is discursively managed that is of particular interest for this article. The argument developed is that in selling extremity through a range of primarily tourist-oriented commercial avenues, the very real prospect of death and injury has been stripped from the activity itself. To elaborate this position, this article draws on several ...
This essay examines physical risk in the commercial film industries of Hollywood and Hong Kong. Many...
Mountaineering is a dangerous activity. For many mountaineers, part of its very attraction is the ri...
The paradoxical notion of 'the adventure' sold as a predictable, managed experience-commodity is exp...
Overview: Broken bones, head trauma, shark attacks, and casualties all while playing the sport you l...
Abstract: This paper emerges after the death of a Portuguese climber, who died in his descent from S...
Risk is an increasingly important factor of our modern society, but that does not mean that risks ha...
Participation in extreme sports is enjoying incredible growth while more traditional recreational ac...
Extreme sports, those activities that lie on the outermost edges of independent adventurous leisure ...
Adventure tourism is a rapidly expanding tourism market segment. It is suggested that adventure trav...
International audienceThe risk of severe and frequent injuries associated with active pursuits in mo...
Extreme sports are traditionally explored from a risk-taking perspective which often assumes that pa...
This study seeks to examine how identity is navigated within ‘risky’ situations, and ultimately how ...
As extreme sports gain popularity – so does the public appreciation of such sports. Mass media are f...
This article investigates the utopian visions of extreme sports as a postwar phenomenon by contrasti...
treme sports are about more than risk taking, rule breaking, or having fun. Extreme sports “are also...
This essay examines physical risk in the commercial film industries of Hollywood and Hong Kong. Many...
Mountaineering is a dangerous activity. For many mountaineers, part of its very attraction is the ri...
The paradoxical notion of 'the adventure' sold as a predictable, managed experience-commodity is exp...
Overview: Broken bones, head trauma, shark attacks, and casualties all while playing the sport you l...
Abstract: This paper emerges after the death of a Portuguese climber, who died in his descent from S...
Risk is an increasingly important factor of our modern society, but that does not mean that risks ha...
Participation in extreme sports is enjoying incredible growth while more traditional recreational ac...
Extreme sports, those activities that lie on the outermost edges of independent adventurous leisure ...
Adventure tourism is a rapidly expanding tourism market segment. It is suggested that adventure trav...
International audienceThe risk of severe and frequent injuries associated with active pursuits in mo...
Extreme sports are traditionally explored from a risk-taking perspective which often assumes that pa...
This study seeks to examine how identity is navigated within ‘risky’ situations, and ultimately how ...
As extreme sports gain popularity – so does the public appreciation of such sports. Mass media are f...
This article investigates the utopian visions of extreme sports as a postwar phenomenon by contrasti...
treme sports are about more than risk taking, rule breaking, or having fun. Extreme sports “are also...
This essay examines physical risk in the commercial film industries of Hollywood and Hong Kong. Many...
Mountaineering is a dangerous activity. For many mountaineers, part of its very attraction is the ri...
The paradoxical notion of 'the adventure' sold as a predictable, managed experience-commodity is exp...