Abstract:
Working class British tourists are renowned for their deviant and risk
behaviours when they go on holiday to Spain. However, there is almost no
consideration for a) how these accelerated attitudes to ‘getting wasted’
evolved; and b) the role of the resort, as well as the British people who
work there, in the process of behavioural coercion. Based on ethnographic
research, I argue in this paper that for many British youth, the idea of
getting wasted on holiday is a socialised process which is commercially
influenced which normally starts through Club 18-30 package holidays.
There young Brits learn what they should be doing on holiday - drinking,
taking drugs, having sex and engaging in violence - and here begins the
‘holiday career’ where they start to learn of the pinnacle of the holiday
experience: Ibiza. It is the ‘place to be’ - even though many don’t really
know why. Some shortcut the holiday career at a younger age and this, I
argue, is what we are currently witnessing - a population of younger Brits
who are being wooed by the potential acquisition of social status which
can come from going to Ibiza which is ideologically constructed for them
by marketing companies, travel op...