"Go Out on the Weekends to the Forest, Get Trashed and Dance": Residual Behaviors and Reconfigured Environments at Psychedelic Trance Festivals
Psytrance music festivals provide familiar environments, typically outside city limits, where release is sought from daily reality, working routines, or common sense. While sharing these goals with other leisure activities, the festivals also aim for the actualization of encountering unknown or alie...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Leisure sciences 2017-11, Vol.39 (6), p.543-560 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Psytrance music festivals provide familiar environments, typically outside city limits, where release is sought from daily reality, working routines, or common sense. While sharing these goals with other leisure activities, the festivals also aim for the actualization of encountering unknown or alien destinations. This journey is enabled by the media ecology of the festival, which notably includes the effects of psychedelic drugs. Drawing on ethnographic research of Melbourne-based festivals, this article explores the cultural meanings of getting "trashed" or "wasted" on psychedelic drugs within the outdoor festival environment. The partygoers' temporary retreat into nature ties into the theme of an exile that traces back to the 1960s and still pervades psychedelic culture. This article reworks this theme by addressing the ironic reconfiguration of nature at psytrance festivals, where excessive media consumption leads to an authentic way to connect our urban cultures with nature in its contemporary unauthenticity. |
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ISSN: | 0149-0400 1521-0588 |
DOI: | 10.1080/01490400.2016.1256796 |