Freedom and Constraint

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Adolescent Young Women
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Contemporary Societies
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Family Expenditure Survey Data
gender and leisure
Girl Friend
Husbandless Mothers
Leisure and Society
Leisure Behaviour
Leisure Education
Leisure Innovation
Leisure Relations
leisure sociology research debates
leisure studies
Leisure Studies Association
Leisure Systems
Life Style
Life Style Requirements
Lone Mothers
Lone Parents
LSA
Participant Recreation
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public recreation policy
Self-service Economy
Social Aspects
social stratification
Sociology of Leisure
Spare Time Activity
unemployment and society
Woman's Pe
Woman’s Pe
Work Leisure Relationships
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367150143
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Nov 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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First published in 1989. In the climate of long-term unemployment, early retirement, and technology that is seen to threaten jobs, 'leisure’ has been presented as the solution to a multitude of social problems. The essays in this collection represent the most important arguments on the problems, myths, and misunderstandings of leisure. Arguing from a range of positions, some sceptical, others more idealistic, they look at the complexities of this field and the social and political problems that surround it.

No single argument dominates. What emerges is a live-wire debate on class and gender, employment and economic status, age and education, which brings the discussion of leisure controversially up to date.

The book, based on papers presented to conferences of the Leisure Studies Association, divides into sections on leisure and social change, the relationship between leisure and social structures, and the tension between leisure and employment. It takes a critical look at leisure in Britain, Sweden, the Netherlands, and the USA, and at the paradoxes that will determine its future. Whilst refusing to see leisure as a synonym for social progress and liberalization, it argues that the quality of leisure reflects the quality of society itself.