This article investigates intersections of sexuality, sex, femininities, and alcohol. The concept of spatially-situated subjectivity is deployed to examine how women negotiate their femininities and sexualities in and through spaces of a 'night out'. A mixed methods approach was deployed with young, single, white women in Wollongong, Australia. Drawing on narrative analysis, our research suggests the paradoxical qualities of pub spaces. We argue that where and why women drink is an outcome of negotiations, transgressions and accommodations as they reconcile a sense of self with(in) the gendered and heterosexed socio-spatial practice of particular pubs. In practical terms, corporeal femininities provide effective advice for ameliorating risk...
Individual and collective subjectivities are central to geographical research on clubbing (Binnie, 2...
Drawing on the three-element model of social practice theory and key conceptualisations relating to ...
In recent years the public discourse around drink spiking has evolved from that of an ‘epidemic’ to ...
This article investigates intersections of sexuality, sex, femininities, and alcohol. The concept of...
In a supposed “post-feminist” society of gender equality, engagement with contemporary spaces such a...
Gender is a key lens for interpreting meanings and practices of drinking. In response to the overwhe...
In a supposed “post-feminist” society of gender equality, engagement with contemporary spaces such a...
Alcohol misuse and violence is a major public safety concern. Although the extent and nature of alco...
Geographers have been slow to address issues about abstinence, drinking and drunkenness, but the imp...
This paper focuses on embodied geographies of alcohol to rethink the weekend. We explore the weekend...
Social research on alcohol and sexual encounters has tended to be siloed into several different rese...
Scholarly work on club culture has frequently focused on the sites and experiences of marginalised g...
This paper investigates young women’s alcohol consumption in the UK within a widespread culture of i...
This article introduces the possibilities of a new term, 'genderism', to describe the hostile readin...
The rise of male strip shows marketed towards heterosexual women has called into question the idea t...
Individual and collective subjectivities are central to geographical research on clubbing (Binnie, 2...
Drawing on the three-element model of social practice theory and key conceptualisations relating to ...
In recent years the public discourse around drink spiking has evolved from that of an ‘epidemic’ to ...
This article investigates intersections of sexuality, sex, femininities, and alcohol. The concept of...
In a supposed “post-feminist” society of gender equality, engagement with contemporary spaces such a...
Gender is a key lens for interpreting meanings and practices of drinking. In response to the overwhe...
In a supposed “post-feminist” society of gender equality, engagement with contemporary spaces such a...
Alcohol misuse and violence is a major public safety concern. Although the extent and nature of alco...
Geographers have been slow to address issues about abstinence, drinking and drunkenness, but the imp...
This paper focuses on embodied geographies of alcohol to rethink the weekend. We explore the weekend...
Social research on alcohol and sexual encounters has tended to be siloed into several different rese...
Scholarly work on club culture has frequently focused on the sites and experiences of marginalised g...
This paper investigates young women’s alcohol consumption in the UK within a widespread culture of i...
This article introduces the possibilities of a new term, 'genderism', to describe the hostile readin...
The rise of male strip shows marketed towards heterosexual women has called into question the idea t...
Individual and collective subjectivities are central to geographical research on clubbing (Binnie, 2...
Drawing on the three-element model of social practice theory and key conceptualisations relating to ...
In recent years the public discourse around drink spiking has evolved from that of an ‘epidemic’ to ...