Abstract

This article examines the alcohol-infused leisure practices of a group of older Afro-Caribbean men in Canada. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted in the Greater Toronto Area, which has a large diasporic Caribbean community, this article examines the ways alcohol consumption at cricket grounds plays an integral role in the reproduction of club members’ gender as well as their homeland cultures, age, class and national identities. In 2008 and 2009 data were collected with a group of cricketers and spectators through observation, casual conversation, participation in social events and 27 in-depth formal interviews with male players and spectators. Findings reveal that drinking at the cricket ground is a means for Caribbean men to mask the effects of old age (limping, forgetfulness and declining physical strength), and thereby renew their investment in hegemonic masculinity. Drinking also enables them to temporarily escape their wives and domestic labour as well as circumvent childcare. Through the brands they consume they perform their class distinctions and celebrate their Canadian and Caribbean national affiliations and transnational mobilities. Drinking at the cricket ground is a means to embrace and challenge dominant gender stereotypes.

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