Presenting a magical paradox of the modern seaside, this book traces the development of a cultural phenomenon from the mid-1800s to the present day. In the process, it modifies the accepted narrative about its rise and fall, reappraising our understanding of the end of a Mass Utopia, and shining new light on the diversity of post-utopias that have emerged in its afterlife.
Fusing social theory, social history, and leisure studies, its thesis adroitly envisions the diverse density of the seaside through a critical lens, making the unfamiliar familiar and vice versa, providing us with an exemplar for a different way of thinking sociologically, which will be used by scholars from a range of different subject fields to encourage fresh reflection on social continuity and change.
Tony Blackshaw is Emeritus Professor of Leisure Studies and Sociology at Sheffield Hallam University. He is the author of many books, including Re-Imagining Leisure Studies (2017), Leisure (2010), and Leisure Life: Myth, Masculinity and Modernity (2003).