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1

Peterson, Richard H. Bonanza rich: Lifestyles of the western mining entrepreneurs. Moscow, Idaho: University of Idaho Press, 1991.

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2

Robert, Rochefort. Le consommateur entrepreneur: Les nouveaux modes de vie. Paris: O. Jacob, 1997.

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3

Big vision, small business: The four keys to finding success & satisfaction as a lifestyle entrepreneur. San Francisco: Ivy Sea Publishing, 2001.

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4

How to succeed as a lifestyle entrepreneur: Running a business without letting it run your life. Chicago, IL: Dearborn Trade, 2003.

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5

Lifestyle entrepreneur: Live your dreams, ignite your passions and run your business from anywhere in the world. New York: Morgan James Publishing, 2014.

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6

Schine, Gary. How To Succeed as a Lifestyle Entrepreneur. Kaplan Business, 2003.

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7

Soul Proprietor: 100 Lessons from a Lifestyle Entrepreneur. Crossing Press, 2001.

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8

Wierzbicki, James. Rock ’n’ Roll. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040078.003.0003.

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This chapter discusses the romantic genealogy of rock 'n' roll and how its style resulted from the happy integration of white hillbilly music with black “race music” or, as it came to be known in the 1950s, “rhythm and blues.” Supported by recent scholarship that has delved into the files of record companies, analyses affirm that rock 'n' roll represents a blatant appropriation of black music by white entrepreneurs. A postmodern view might regard rock 'n' roll not even as music, but as simply “a marketing concept that evolved into a lifestyle.” The chapter also analyzes how Bill Haley's recording of “Rock Around the Clock” turned the tide of American popular music in late 1955.
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9

Pollak, Jane. Soul Proprietor: 101 Lessons from a Lifestyle Entrepreneur (CD version). Jane Pollak, Inc., 2003.

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10

Rundquist, Thomas J. Cheapway Business Plan and Lifestyle to be Like a Millionaire Entrepreneur. Nova Media, 2001.

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11

Rundquist, Thomas J. Cheapskate Business Plan and Lifestyle to be Like a Millionaire Entrepreneur. Nova Media, 2001.

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12

Greenland, Thomas H. Jazz Jobbing. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040115.003.0007.

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This chapter examines jazz jobbing professionals' attraction for and attention to jazz, their roles as creative improvisers and co-performers, and their relationships with other jazz scene participants in New York City. It first considers how jazz entrepreneurs meet the challenges of doing business, suggesting that their lifestyle is an outgrowth of their ongoing enthusiasm for and commitment to the music. It then looks at professionals as co-improvisers and goes on to explain how their attention is influenced by job-related contingencies, and how this affects the way they hear and understand music. It also discusses professionals' active participation in the live music scene as well as their involvement in collaborative expressions of art in improvised jazz communities. The chapter shows that jazz professionals, as workers in the jazz art world, provide crucial services and support for performers, fans, venue operators, and each other while also “performing” off-stage for their own constituencies of viewers and readers.
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13

Green, Connie Ragen. Living The Internet Lifestyle: Quit Your Job, Become an Entrepreneur, and Live Your Ideal Life. Hunter's Moon Publishing, 2013.

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14

Warburton, Dan. Dream It Choose It Live It: The PROVEN SYSTEM to Create Your Dream Entrepreneur Lifestyle. Panoma Press Limited, 2020.

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15

Adraoui, Mohamed-Ali. Salafism Goes Global. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190062460.001.0001.

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Salafism has emerged as one of the most visible and questioned faces in contemporary Islam. In many countries, from the East to the West, this fundamentalist vision seeking to restore a version of Islam that is supposed to be pure and unchanged is increasingly successful. This is the case in France, where thousands of Muslims are now dedicated to living this puritanical and fundamentalist religiosity. In connection with some Islamic countries, starting with Saudi Arabia, they appeal to a transnational narrative through which they promote a new face of globalization. Reacting to both political Islam and jihadism, they prefer to become entrepreneurs in order to seek economic success. Splitting from the rest of society, they are building a counternarrative in which they represent the purest form of the Islamic identity. Using research from a prolonged immersion in French Salafist communities, this book sheds light on the lifestyle, representations, profiles, and trajectories of these communities. By focusing on quietist Salafism and its formative ties with several Gulf countries, especially with Saudi Arabia, this book is also an attempt to understand contemporary religious globalizations. It also sheds light on a dynamic that is less centered on formal political entities and primarily refers to a globalization taking place in the margins that have been little studied for too long.
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16

Fuehl, Andy, and Phil Laut. Wealth Without a Job: The Entrepreneur's Guide to Freedom and Security Beyond the 9 to 5 Lifestyle. Wiley, 2004.

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17

Fuehl, Andy, and Phil Laut. Wealth Without a Job: The Entrepreneur's Guide to Freedom and Security Beyond the 9 to 5 Lifestyle. John Wiley & Sons, 2006.

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18

Berenyi, Cokie. Perfect Day: An Entrepreneur's Guide to Curing Lifestyle Deficit Disorder and Reclaiming Your Business, Your Relationships, and Your Life. Morgan James Publishing, 2018.

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19

Jones, Geoffrey. Profits and Sustainability. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198706977.001.0001.

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The book tells the unknown story of entrepreneurs who believed business could help create a more sustainable world. It challenges the received point of view that such green entrepreneurs are a recent phenomenon, and instead traces their origins much further back in the convictions of people committed to unusual lifestyles, in the zeal of radicals, and in the often unsuccessful efforts of visionaries to bring a new world into being long before the world was ready for it. This book looks at many such individuals in the United States, Europe, and elsewhere, and in industries as diverse as architecture, natural beauty, organic food, recycling, solar and wind energy, and sustainable finance. In each industry, the book explores the drivers of green entrepreneurship over time, how businesses were built, and the lessons to be learned. It is shown that it was only from the 1980s that green businesses were able to break out of marginal positions, yet the scaling of such businesses and the rise of corporate environmentalism raised new issues of legitimacy. The historical achievement of green entrepreneurs remains that through their willingness to be unconventional, they opened up new ways of thinking about sustainability, and have laid the foundations for the sustainable world of the future.
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20

Green, Jonathan. Serve no master: How to escape the 9-5, start up an online business, fire your boss and become a lifestyle entrepreneur or digital nomad. 2016.

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