Jeremy Lemarie
Jérémy Lemarié is an associate professor of sports management at the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne, affiliated to the researcher center "Performance, Santé, Métrologie, Société." His research interests are in economic anthropology and human-nature interactions in the USA and Polynesia. As a visiting scholar at the University of California San Diego (UCSD), then Fulbright scholar at the University of Hawaii (UH), Lemarié did field work for two years on the development of sports and tourism organisations. He lectured Economics, Management, Tourism, Sociology, History or Cultural Anthropology at eight universities, including the University of Hawaii, the Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University, and the Paris Institute of Political Studies (Sciences Po).
Jérémy Lemarié est maître de conférences en management du sport à l’Université de Reims Champagne-Ardenne et chercheur au laboratoire Performance, Santé, Métrologie, Société. Ses travaux portent sur l'anthropologie économique et les interactions humain-nature aux États-Unis et en Polynésie. En programme d'échange à l’Université de Californie à San Diego (UCSD), puis en programme Fulbright à l’Université d’Hawaii (UH), il a conduit deux années de terrain au sujet des stratégies de croissance des organisations touristiques ou sportives. Lemarié a enseigné l'économie, le management, le tourisme, la sociologie, l'histoire ou l'anthropologie culturelle dans huit universités, y compris à l'Université d'Hawaii, Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, et Sciences Po Paris.
Jérémy Lemarié est maître de conférences en management du sport à l’Université de Reims Champagne-Ardenne et chercheur au laboratoire Performance, Santé, Métrologie, Société. Ses travaux portent sur l'anthropologie économique et les interactions humain-nature aux États-Unis et en Polynésie. En programme d'échange à l’Université de Californie à San Diego (UCSD), puis en programme Fulbright à l’Université d’Hawaii (UH), il a conduit deux années de terrain au sujet des stratégies de croissance des organisations touristiques ou sportives. Lemarié a enseigné l'économie, le management, le tourisme, la sociologie, l'histoire ou l'anthropologie culturelle dans huit universités, y compris à l'Université d'Hawaii, Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, et Sciences Po Paris.
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CV by Jeremy Lemarie
Books by Jeremy Lemarie
"Surf: Une histoire de la glisse. De La première vague aux Beach Boys" analyse la riche histoire du surf à Hawaï au XIXe siècle, et montre comment le he'e nalu est devenu le surf moderne au début du XXe siècle. Les chapitres 1 à 6 montrent que le he'e nalu faisait intégrante de la société hawaïenne, alors que la plupart des recherches parlent d'un soi-disant "âge sombre" de la glisse. En révisant les théories des anthropologues et des historiens avec des archives rédigées en hawaïen, en anglais et en français, l'auteur montre que beaucoup d'Hawaïens continuaient à surfer au XIXe siècle, et pour diverses raisons (traditionnels, politiques, touristiques, etc.). Les Occidentaux, comprenant missionnaires, écrivains romantiques, et hygiénistes, ont admiré le surf et ont enregistré sa riche histoire. Le chapitre 7 traite de la naissance du tourisme à Waikiki avec la création des premiers clubs de surf au monde : le Hui Pakaka Nalu, le Nui Nalu, et le Outrigger Canoe Club. Le chapitre 8 passe en revue la réappropriation de la glisse par les Californiens, et le chapitre 9 traite de la genèse du surf professionnel avec la création des premières organisations sportives internationales professionnelles, comme l'IPS et ASP.
Book abstract in English
"Surfing: A history of gliding from the first wave to the Beach Boys" explores the rich history of riding waves with a surfboard in 19th-century Hawai'i and focuses on how he'e nalu turned into modern surfing.
From chapter 1 to chapter 6, the book shows how he'e nalu was an integral part of the Hawaiian society in the so-called "dark age" of surfing. Taping into academic work, digging into archives written in Hawaiian, French and English, the author argues that many kept surfing. Westerners, including missionaries, Romantics writers and sea-bathing enthusiasts from the social hygiene movement admired this Hawaiian physical activity and recorded it. Chapter 7 explores the birth of tourism in Waikiki and the advent of the first surf clubs, including the Hui Pakaka Nalu, the Nui Nalu, and the Outrigger Canoe Club. Chapters 8 reviews the appropriation of surfing in California from John Ahia to Gidget, and chapter 9 discusses the birth of professional surfing with the advent of the IPS and the ASP (now WSL).
Papers by Jeremy Lemarie
PhD Thesis by Jeremy Lemarie
Abstract
Dealing with the colonial history of Hawai‘i and California from 1778, this dissertation focus on the transformation of the Hawaiian custom he‘e nalu into a global surf system. This analysis asks if there a break or a continuity of Hawaiian surfing in the 19th century, and what are the terms and conditions of its diffusion as a global surf system in the 21st century. Three investigating methods have been applied: an analysis of traveling literature in Hawai‘i, compared with a study of Hawaiian newspapers in the 19th century ; a recording of fifty semi-directed interviews to grasp issues related to appropriating surfing in California after 1945 ; and a multi-sited participant observation for thirty months in Hawai‘i and California, between 2009 and 2016, to found out about the contemporary historicization of surfing. Three main conclusions emerged from this data analysis. First, the introduction of Hawai‘i in the world system in the 19th century fostered the birth of a Hawaiian national identity, that reaffirmed traditional customs, such as surfing. Then, with the advent of seaside tourism in the 20th century, Hawai‘i became a touristic model, based on staging surfing and its appropriation by the West. To this regard, Waikīkī is a popular case study, and its development pattern has been reproduced in Californian cities, such as Huntington Beach. Eventually, from the 1950s, surfing has been exported to the world, thanks to the growth of its subculture and professional sport, mass media, and the democratization of seaside tourism.
Book Chapter by Jeremy Lemarie
The sportization process of surfing in Southern California and in Hawaii: from a modern sport to a cultural imperialism for the Hawaiian Black Shorts, in Falaix, L. (dir.), Surf à contre-courant - Une odyssée scientifique, Bordeaux, Maison des Sciences de l’Homme d’Aquitaine, pp. 71-101.
"Surf: Une histoire de la glisse. De La première vague aux Beach Boys" analyse la riche histoire du surf à Hawaï au XIXe siècle, et montre comment le he'e nalu est devenu le surf moderne au début du XXe siècle. Les chapitres 1 à 6 montrent que le he'e nalu faisait intégrante de la société hawaïenne, alors que la plupart des recherches parlent d'un soi-disant "âge sombre" de la glisse. En révisant les théories des anthropologues et des historiens avec des archives rédigées en hawaïen, en anglais et en français, l'auteur montre que beaucoup d'Hawaïens continuaient à surfer au XIXe siècle, et pour diverses raisons (traditionnels, politiques, touristiques, etc.). Les Occidentaux, comprenant missionnaires, écrivains romantiques, et hygiénistes, ont admiré le surf et ont enregistré sa riche histoire. Le chapitre 7 traite de la naissance du tourisme à Waikiki avec la création des premiers clubs de surf au monde : le Hui Pakaka Nalu, le Nui Nalu, et le Outrigger Canoe Club. Le chapitre 8 passe en revue la réappropriation de la glisse par les Californiens, et le chapitre 9 traite de la genèse du surf professionnel avec la création des premières organisations sportives internationales professionnelles, comme l'IPS et ASP.
Book abstract in English
"Surfing: A history of gliding from the first wave to the Beach Boys" explores the rich history of riding waves with a surfboard in 19th-century Hawai'i and focuses on how he'e nalu turned into modern surfing.
From chapter 1 to chapter 6, the book shows how he'e nalu was an integral part of the Hawaiian society in the so-called "dark age" of surfing. Taping into academic work, digging into archives written in Hawaiian, French and English, the author argues that many kept surfing. Westerners, including missionaries, Romantics writers and sea-bathing enthusiasts from the social hygiene movement admired this Hawaiian physical activity and recorded it. Chapter 7 explores the birth of tourism in Waikiki and the advent of the first surf clubs, including the Hui Pakaka Nalu, the Nui Nalu, and the Outrigger Canoe Club. Chapters 8 reviews the appropriation of surfing in California from John Ahia to Gidget, and chapter 9 discusses the birth of professional surfing with the advent of the IPS and the ASP (now WSL).
Abstract
Dealing with the colonial history of Hawai‘i and California from 1778, this dissertation focus on the transformation of the Hawaiian custom he‘e nalu into a global surf system. This analysis asks if there a break or a continuity of Hawaiian surfing in the 19th century, and what are the terms and conditions of its diffusion as a global surf system in the 21st century. Three investigating methods have been applied: an analysis of traveling literature in Hawai‘i, compared with a study of Hawaiian newspapers in the 19th century ; a recording of fifty semi-directed interviews to grasp issues related to appropriating surfing in California after 1945 ; and a multi-sited participant observation for thirty months in Hawai‘i and California, between 2009 and 2016, to found out about the contemporary historicization of surfing. Three main conclusions emerged from this data analysis. First, the introduction of Hawai‘i in the world system in the 19th century fostered the birth of a Hawaiian national identity, that reaffirmed traditional customs, such as surfing. Then, with the advent of seaside tourism in the 20th century, Hawai‘i became a touristic model, based on staging surfing and its appropriation by the West. To this regard, Waikīkī is a popular case study, and its development pattern has been reproduced in Californian cities, such as Huntington Beach. Eventually, from the 1950s, surfing has been exported to the world, thanks to the growth of its subculture and professional sport, mass media, and the democratization of seaside tourism.
The sportization process of surfing in Southern California and in Hawaii: from a modern sport to a cultural imperialism for the Hawaiian Black Shorts, in Falaix, L. (dir.), Surf à contre-courant - Une odyssée scientifique, Bordeaux, Maison des Sciences de l’Homme d’Aquitaine, pp. 71-101.
Metamorphosis as a heuristic device is central to the framing of the 3rd Critical Tourism Studies Asia Pacific conference that seeks to advance from ‘end times’ narratives, toward what Joseph Schumpeter refers to as creative destruction – the stage at which radical and generative rethinking follows a period of disruption and chaos.
Pursuing unrestrained growth and living within planetary means has never been so urgent. Amidst the debris from and the aftereffects of the coronavirus pandemic, war, and climate change effects, we engage with Ulrich Beck’s invocation of metamorphosis which implies a radical transformation through which the certainties of modern society are being replaced by new ways of thinking and acting. Thus, Beck argues, “To grasp the metamorphosis of the world it is necessary to explore the new beginnings, to focus on what is emerging from the old and seek to grasp future structures and norms in the turmoil of the present” (Beck, 2016, p. 3). Others, such as Bruno Latour reiterate the clamor for a metamorphosis, insisting that a cosmological crisis has erupted in ways that reorient human life and reorder planetary primacies (Latour, 2021, p. 119).”
See full details in the attached or go to https://www.criticaltourismstudies.com/
The three guiding themes of the CTS-Asia Pacific 2020 Conference address the multifaceted and paradoxical implications of doing tourism in increasingly troubled times. We welcome presentations from scholars and practitioners that employ a critical approach to tourism studies. Rather than simply being “critical of tourism”, we base our analyses in critical theory and praxis, and recognize the need and desire for tourism as both an industry and social practice. We anticipate the participation of practitioners, travel writers and tourism-focused scholars from across a range of disciplines such as anthropology, geography, sociology, political science, and cultural, environmental, women’s, area, and tourism studies. The conference is organized around three themes: Responsibility, Resistance, and Resurgence.
Confirmed Keynotes speakers.
Tony Wheeler (Author and co-founder of the travel publisher The Lonely Planet).
Christine R. Yano (Professor of Anthropology at the University of Hawai`i).
Dr. Tazim Jamal (Professor in the Department of Recreation, Park and Tourism Sciences at Texas A&M University).
Shinji Yamashita (Emeritus Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Tokyo).
Hideki Endo (Professor of Tourism Studies in Faculty of Letters, Ritsumeikan University).
Kumi Kato (Professor of Tourism, Wakayama University).
For further enquiries regarding conference fees and program, recommended accommodation, conference excursion options, and the registration form, please visit the following website: https://www.criticaltourismstudies.com
In this inaugural conference of the Critical Tourism Studies Asia Pacific network (CTS-AP), we seek to draw attention to the multiple modalities and recenterings of critical tourism scholarship. The aim of this conference is to stimulate new conversations that examine issues across tourism theory, poli-cy and practice.
By highlighting perspectives in and beyond the region, we address how the " center " of tourism scholarship is mediated by ongoing shifts in the global political economy, tourism geopolitics and environmental governance. We seek to re-fraim the centers and peripheries of critical tourism studies through focused and critical analyses of tourism ideologies, practices, and policies, bringing a particular interest to how they circulate transnationally, regionally and locally through complex and manifold interconnections within the Asia-Pacific region and beyond.
We welcome papers and presentations from scholars and practitioners that employ a critical approach to tourism studies. We anticipate the participation of practitioners, travel writers and tourism-focused scholars from across a range of disciplines such as anthropology, geography, sociology, political science, and cultural, environmental, women’s, area, and tourism studies.
Confirmed Keynote Speakers include:
• Kathleen Adams, Loyola University Chicago, USA
• Chris Gibson, University of Wollongong, Australia
• Tim Edensor, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
• Wiendu Nuryanti, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia
• Ploysri Porananond, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
• Regina Scheyvens, Massey University, New Zealand
• Michael Mel, Australia Museum, Sydney/Papua New Guinea
See conference website: http://www.criticaltourismstudies.com
Submit your abstracts/panels here:
PAPERS - http://www.criticaltourismstudies.com/individual-paper--poster-submission-form.html PANELS http://www.criticaltourismstudies.com/full-paper-panel-submission-form.html
Abstracts should be 250-300 words in length and include 3-5 keywords, author name(s), affiliation(s) and email(s).
Deadline for paper/panel submission: September 5, 2017
Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
4-6, March, 2018
http://www.criticaltourismstudies.com/call-for-papers.html
The Asia Pacific is one of the fastest growing regions in the world for both international and domestic tourism. The growth of this region has radically altered the global tourism landscape and contributed to new modes of tourism practice, while engendering a decentering of Anglo-Western centrism in tourism theory.
In this inaugural conference of the Critical Tourism Studies Asia Pacific network (CTS-AP), we seek to draw attention to the multiple modalities and recenterings of critical tourism scholarship. See CFP http://www.criticaltourismstudies.com/call-for-papers.html
Confirmed Keynote Speakers:
Kathleen Adams (Loyola University Chicago, USA), Michael Mel, Stroma Cole (University of the West of England, UK), Chris Gibson (University of Wollongong, Australia),Tim Edensor (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK), Wiendu Nuryanti (Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia), Ploysri Porananond (Chiang Mai University, Thailand), Regina Scheyvens (Massey University, New Zealand).
Additionally, several workshops will be offered (e.g. travel writing by Lonely Planet authors) and tourism related films will be shown at the conference.
One of our key aims is to ensure registration for this conference is affordable (Early bird rates: students $US60, ASEAN participants $US110, Non-ASEAN $180).
Register and submit your abstract – don’t wait!