Title: Leisure
1chapter 4
- Leisure
- and Recreation
- for Individuals
- in Society
Daniel G. Yoder
2Introduction
- This chapter considers the leisure of the
individual in society - Families
- Clans and tribes
- Neighborhoods and communities
- Villages, towns, and cities
- Gangs and clubs
- Unions, associations, and congregations
-
- Human existence and development cannot occur
without support from and interaction with others.
3Leisure As a Complex Social Phenomenon
- Leisure is affected by many social institutions
- Economics
- Politics
- Work
- Technology
- War
4Solitary Leisure and Society
- A few activities are entirely solitary, some are
purely social, and most can be either private or
communal. - Consider the following
- Solitary leisure does not take place in a social
vacuum. - Individuals and groups profoundly affect our
solitary leisure activities. - Leisure activities while we are alone influence
the people and the world around us.
5The World Around Us
- Consider how the world around us affects our
private leisure in three ways - By supporting it
- By infringing upon it
- By forcing us into it
6Questions to PonderSolitary Leisure and Its
Affect on Others
- How does one persons leisure directly and
indirectly affect those around him? - Can solitary leisure have a positive influence on
others? - Can solitary leisure have serious negative
consequences, not just to the person but to those
around her? - Can even a single act of solitary leisure have
both negative and positive influences?
7Implications for Leisure Professionals
- Recognize the benefits and costs of solitary
leisure pursuits to individuals, those around
them, and society in general. - Most solo leisure activities require, at the
least, space, some equipment and materials, and
unencumbered time, but not a great many
resources. - Recognize and educate the public about the
essential balance that must exist between
solitary leisure and leisure that directly
involves others.
8Primary Groups Defined
- These are small groups in which there are
face-to-face relations of a fairly intimate and
personal nature. - Two basic types are families and cliques. In
other words, they are organized around ties of
either kinship or friendship (Lenski, Nolan,
Lenski, 1995).
9Leisure and Primary Groups
- Most leisure is undertaken with others.
- Other people involved in the leisure activity are
not merely bystanders they are essential
components of the activity. - In general, people are more important in leisure
than the form of the activity (Kelly, 1987). - Social custom and societal expectations
profoundly affect leisure when it is undertaken
in the family and with close friends.
10Life Span and Family Cycle and the Typical
Leisure Activity
- Some leisure activities are common and some less
common at different stages of life. - A core of activities persist through a persons
life, especially their adult years (Kelly, 1999).
- General types of leisure also tend to be common
for many members of the same age group. - Variation, or balance, exists among and between
the age groups.
11Leisure Activity and the Family
- Different cultures have various forms of kinship
groupings. - The same culture may change its notion of
family over time. - Families move through a series of predictable
stages. - The stages are not separate and distinct with
sharp dividing lines rather, each stage tends to
merge into the stage before and after it.
12Leisure and Secondary Groups
- Henslin (1993) defines a secondary group as a
larger, relatively temporary, more anonymous,
formal and impersonal group based on some
interest or activity, whose members are likely to
interact on the basis of specific roles. - The influence an individual has on secondary
groups, while not obvious, is very real.
13Leisure, Recreation, and Gender
- Gender is a social category that includes
attitudes, expectation, and expressions of
masculinity and femininity. Sex refers to the
biological component of being either male or
female. - Gender is one of the most defining
characteristics human beings possess. Because of
that, it is linked to leisure in many complex
relationships.
14Historical Gender Examples
- Males have enjoyed a privileged position in all
Western cultures. - Recreation activities for women have taken place
in the home and have had a domestic component
such as cooking, decorating, and providing
activity for children. - Women are still responsible for the major duties
in maintaining home and family. On average, women
spend 50 hours each week on family work, while
men average 11 hours. This limits the time
available for leisure (Newman, 1999).
15Russells 5 Conclusions
- Disparity has decreased over the past century,
but men continue to experience more leisure in
terms of breadth and depth. - Long-entrenched roles for each gender
significantly affect recreation. - Mens recreation more often takes place beyond
the confines of the home. Women more often
participate in leisure in the home. - (continued)
16Russells 5 Conclusions (continued)
- 4. Womens leisure and recreation is fragmented
because of the burden of family care. Men can
block out an entire afternoon or even a few days
exclusively for leisure. - 5. Older women especially may labor under the
false belief that leisure must be earned or that
they are not entitled to it at all.
17Leisure, Ethnicity, and Race
- Race refers to biological characteristics.
- Ethnicity refers to cultural characteristics.
Henslin (1993) notes that people of the same
ethnicity identify with one another on the basis
of common ancestry and cultural heritage. - Leisure participation rates vary according to
race and ethnicity.
18Leisure, Recreation, and Religion
- Religion has always been the anchor of identity
for human beings. Religious beliefs give meaning
to life, and the experiences associated with them
provide personal gratification, as well as
release from the frustrations and anxieties of
daily life (Eschleman, Cashion, Basirico,
1993). - Relationship among leisure, recreation, and
religion in the United States is long and
complex. - (continued)
19Leisure, Recreation, and Religion (continued)
- The leisure of most citizens was dominated by
religion when America was just beginning. - Churches have recently used recreation as a tool
to foster a sense of community, attract members,
and keep members from activity that is harmful.
20Leisure, Recreation, and Socioeconomic Class
- Individuals of nearly all societies are
categorized according to some combination of
wealth, power, party affiliation, life chances,
and prestige. - Some systems, like the caste system in India, are
very rigid. The boundaries are distinct and
movement between the different categories is
nearly impossible. - A class system is much more fluid with overlap
between classes and the possibility of movement
up and down among the classes.
21Newmans Class System for the United States
- The upper class is made up of owners of vast
property and wealth. Some estimate that one half
percent of the upper class owns more than 25 of
the countrys wealth (Henslin, 1993). - The middle class is made up of managers,
small-business owners, and professionals. - The working class is made up predominantly of
laborers who make modest wages and own little
property. - Lower or poor class members are those who either
work for minimum wages, are often unemployed, or
who are unemployable.
22Class Affects Sports Participation
- Recent research on sports and social equality in
the United States demonstrates a general pattern
of under-representation of people from the lowest
income levels among active participants in
organized sports and physical recreation. - (Gruneau, 1999)
- Economic stratification is at least a filter,
with low incomes simply eliminating the majority
of the population from cost-intensive activity. - (Kelly, 1996)
23Good and Bad Leisure and Recreation
- These are difficult to determine because of
differences in individual values and
interpretations. (There are several different and
competing theories about what is good and bad
and right and wrong.) - The individual and the various societies of which
he or she is a part jointly determine goodness in
all things, including leisure and recreation.
24Implications for Professionals
- One must continue to drive home the point that
leisure and recreation are essential So
important, in fact, that humans, regardless of
their lot in life, have them by right, not
because they are of a particular correct color,
age, ethnicity, gender, religion, or class.