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DOI: 10.1177/1468797604054376 Sea, sun, sex and the discontents of pleasureLancaster University, UK, diken{at}lancaster.ac.uk
University of Aarhus, Denmark, cbl{at}ps.au.dk This article focuses on party tourism as a kind of hedonism enjoyed on a massive scale in which the citizen is transformed into a party animal, a reduction which is experienced as a liberation from the daily routine of the city or civilization, and in which the pursuit of unlimited enjoyment creates an exceptional zone where the body as an object of desire and as abject become indistinguishable. In this process, sociality tends to be reformed in the image of a mass rather than society and transgression/enjoyment paradoxically becomes the law. The article elaborates on this paradoxical notion of forced enjoyment by reading Kant and Sade together: Sade (re)formulates Kants categorical imperative by universalizing transgression while, on the other hand, Kant illuminates Sade by stressing that the universal maxim and the particular tendencies always conflict.
Key Words: exception festival forced enjoyment homo sacer mass party tourism Sadism
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