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Wasted: towards a critical research agenda for disposability in leisure
Summary
This paper calls for leisure studies scholars to place disposability and plastic waste at the center of their research agenda, arguing that leisure practices are deeply implicated in producing the microplastic pollution accumulating in oceans and ecosystems worldwide.
‘Garbage Island’. ‘The Pacific Trash Vortex’. ‘The Great Pacific Garbage Patch’. Titles abound for the growing build-up of waste, mostly microplastic and non-biodegradable, floating in the North Pacific Ocean. Unfortunately, Garbage Island is just one egregious example of how human activities are exacting an enormous toll on the planet. Considerations of waste should be central to our field, not merely due to the degree to which leisure practices are deeply implicated in its production but because the very provision of leisure opportunities often rests on disposability. The time is ripe to develop a research agenda for understanding waste and disposability in leisure. This research note presents a brief accounting of waste as it has been taken up in our field in an effort to set a path forward for understanding and addressing this issue. Of course, explorations of consumption in leisure studies is well-trod ground and, arguably, critical considerations of how individuals consume through leisure (i.e. conspicuous consumption) form the backbone of our field. Rather surprisingly, however, relatively little, critical attention has been given to the very notion of waste, or the disposability that undergirds the material production and provision of leisure.
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