Hospitality and Society
Volume 9, Issue 2, 2019, Pages 105-124

Kidnapping for fun and profit? Voluntary abduction, extreme consumption and self-making in a risk society (Article)

Yar M. , Tzanelli R.*
  • a Lancaster University, Lancaster University Law School, Bowland North, Lancaster, LA1 4YN, United Kingdom
  • b University of Leeds, School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom

Abstract

This article explores the emerging phenomenon of 'staged kidnapping', a consumeroriented experience in which individuals voluntarily subject themselves to abduction and associated experiences of detention, deprivation, interrogation and degradation. We explore the staging, presentation and consumption of voluntary abduction through an analysis of the online marketing and reporting of the phenomenon, to consider the ways new consumerist trends alter traditional notions of hospitality. We analyse the phenomenon's emergence within the twin theoretical frames of Beck's 'risk society' thesis and Lyng's account of 'voluntary risk-taking' as a form of 'edgework'. We argue that the framing and appeal of such experiences can be fruitfully located as an element in the reflexive production of the post-traditional self, a process that requires subjects to confront and manage (materially or symbolically) the conditions of risk and uncertainty that characterize contemporary inhospitable lifeworlds. © 2019 Intellect Ltd Article.

Author Keywords

hospitality simulation Risk consumption Edgework kidnapping

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85067363797&doi=10.1386%2fhosp.9.2.105_1&partnerID=40&md5=d2abb9d002770334396555d35b0c0956

DOI: 10.1386/hosp.9.2.105_1
ISSN: 20427913
Original Language: English