Lifestyle Gambling in Accelerated Culture

Raymen, Thomas (2019) Lifestyle Gambling in Accelerated Culture. In: Deviant Leisure. Palgrave Studies in Crime, Media and Culture . Palgrave, pp. 259-282. ISBN 9783030177355

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17736-2_12

Abstract

This chapter explores the myriad harms associated with the contemporary attachment of gambling to identity, and how these harms are amplified and played out within the digital spheres of social media and smartphone sports-betting apps. The first section argues that existing research which conceptualises gambling as separate from everyday life is largely obsolete in the contemporary context. Here, ethnographic data among a group of ‘lifestyle gamblers’ suggests that gambling has become an integral feature of the wider masculine weekend leisure experience, intimately connected to an infantilised consumer identity that is peculiar to late-capitalism. However, this chapter also argues that the socialisation of sports-betting into an identity-based betting culture has extended beyond the offline social realms of pubs and friendship groups and extended further into the online spheres of social media. Here, this chapter explores the role of ‘affiliate tipsters’ and their methods of creating ‘laddish’ and banter-filled online spaces of socialisation for forms of high-risk sports-betting. This focus upon digital lifestyle gambling brings the role of technology to the foreground. It is suggested that technology has not only loosened gambling from fixed spatial moorings, but that the underpinning algorithms of social media have created a personalised ‘technological unconscious’ in which advertisements for betting and suggestions of following betting accounts make attempts at stopping or curtailing gambling increasingly difficult for problematic and non-problematic gamblers alike. Finally, this chapter explores how the psychoanalytical processes of gambling combine with technology to fundamentally transform the digital lifestyle gambler’s relationship to money in potentially problematic ways.

Item Type: Book Section
Uncontrolled Keywords: Deviance, Leisure, crime, Political Economy of Deviant Leisure, Leisure Studies, Criminological Theory, Social Harm
Subjects: L300 Sociology
Department: Faculties > Arts, Design and Social Sciences > Social Sciences
Depositing User: Rachel Branson
Date Deposited: 01 Apr 2020 10:27
Last Modified: 01 Apr 2020 10:33
URI: http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/42643

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