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Anomie

Collective effervescence

Social solidarity

aimlessness and disconnection caused by a lack of shared norms and values

excitement and joy that comes with shared engagement in an activity. collective ritual, being a group.

connection to others and society through meaningful positions, shared values/norms, and social interaction

Commodification

Exchange value

Use Value

Capitalism as crisis ridden

Cultural capital

marx Social class

Alienation

contradictory interests of labour and capital and the profit motive of owners results in periodic economic booms and busts.

one’s position relative to the means of production (worker (proletariat), owner (bourgeoisie), small owner who works (petite bourgeoisie).

the value something has to people for their lives.

the price one can get by trading something in the marketplace

the values, knowledge, skills, and ideas that are valued in a given culture and that allow for social mobility.

when products, services, or experiences are turned into sellable commodities.

when work separates workers from the product of their work, work process, other workers, and their own creative selves.

Disneyfication

Rationalization

McDonaldization

Weberian social class

places or experiences into something simplified, controlled, and 'safe'. ‘fun’, idealized tourist experience.

based on one’s market position (money you make)

organizational form that emphasizes calculability, predictability, control, and efficiency. homogenous and predictable.

the emphasis on efficiency, coordination and reason leading to a disenchantment of the world where ideas of magic, tradition and religion.

Social construction of reality

Overtourism

Social self

Intersectionality

Our life chances are shaped by our plural social positions. Our experience of the world is shaped by our unique combination of these positions.

Our ‘self’ (who we are for ourselves and others) is a construct of all the social interactions we have and thus is never ‘fixed’.

When excessive numbers of visitors create problems for a place or its inhabitants.

Reality (including economic forms, gender identities etc. etc.) is created in an ongoing process of interaction and thus can (and does) change

Street

Gentrification

Third space

Suburbanization

Road

Zoning

offer high-speed connections to destinations (without being encumbered by driveways, intersections etc.

flow of capital to lower-income and working-class neighbourhoods making such places unaffordable and uninviting

growth of cities through creation of new ‘communities’ outside of the original city boundaries that depend upon the city for features that they lack

A place that is neither home nor work, with very low barriers to entry, where once socialize (actively or not) in the company of others

serve to provide access to residences, shopping, or other destinations at a relatively slow speed

The parceling of land into ‘zones’ each being restricted to a particular use.