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Susann Baller Susann.Baller@unibas.ch Call for papers: Leisure, sport and consumption in Africa Edited by Scarlett Cornelissen (Stellenbosch University, South Africa) and Susann Baller (Basel University, Switzerland) The International Journal of the History of Sport Regional Issue: Africa 2013 Volume 30, issue 16 In recent years there has been a notable surge in studies about sport as expressions of popular culture on the African continent. Much of the focus has fallen on the role of specific sports, such as football, in contemporary African culture, although there has also been exploration of the practices and spaces of indigenous sports and sport in pre-colonial and colonial contexts. In these works sport is commonly used as entry point to understand a variety of social dynamics - identity, social hierarchies, power and resistance - in African societies. In contrast, there has been relatively little focus on sport as an aspect of leisure and consumption within Africa and few works that offer treatment of sport as one among multiple leisure practices on the continent. Looking at sport as leisure form encourages looking at various aspects of its creation (or production), use (or consumption), performance, expression, as well as contestation and challenge. It provides insights into the geographies of leisure, the policies of leisure, and the relationships between work, time and leisure. Moreover, it allows for exploring the commercial and economic side of sport and leisure activities, as well as the role which transnational leisure industries increasingly play in sport. In the early 1980s, Tim Couzens coined the concept of 'moralizing leisure time' which describes how missionaries, mining industries and colonial administrations used leisure as a means to 'educate' African elites according to their own norms. Since then, there have been some important studies of the everyday in Africa (e.g. Eckert and Jones, 'Historical writing about everyday life', 2002), some of which include examinations of leisure and sport (Zeleza and Veney, 'Leisure in Urban Africa', 2003; and also Akeyampong and Ambler, 'Leisure in African history: An introduction', 2002, Martin, 'Leisure and Society in Colonial Brazzaville', 1995). Yet, it seems time to revisit the leisure practices of African societies for further research, as theorisation of various expressions of leisure activities, including sport, beyond the 'moralizing effects' of leisure in Africa remains relatively sparse. In this special issue we would like to build on earlier work on leisure in urban, colonial, precolonial and contemporary Africa by explicitly exploring sport as leisure form with distinctive political economy features. We consider questions such as the following: what is the nexus between leisure and sport in past and/or present, and how do varieties of leisure shape each other? How is leisure produced in Africa? How is it consumed, and how is it commoditised? What meanings are attached to leisure and what processes of commodification are relied on? We are also interested in questions of leisure as economic activity - how it is corporatized, how it is regulated and how it functions as industry in the African setting. The editors welcome papers that address one or a variety of the following: i) Leisure space and leisure time in Africa; ii) Sport as leisure form; iii) Producing and marketing leisure: culture/sport industries in Africa; iv) Performing sport: sport, fandom and identity on the continent; v) Consumption of leisure: sport and tourism; vi) Sport events and the economy of leisure; vii) Transnational sport industries and leisure in Africa; viii) Sport, media and leisure economies. Please submit a 300-word abstracts by 5 January, 2013 to Scarlett Cornelissen (sc3@sun.ac.za) and Susann Baller (susann.baller@unibas.ch). Successful applicants will be notified by 5 February, 2013. Draft papers will be due by 6 May, 2013. Publication is scheduled for autumn 2013.
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