ABSTRACT

This landmark publication brings together some of the most perceptive commentators of the present moment to explore core ideas and cutting edge developments in the field of Leisure Studies. It offers important new insights into the dynamics of the transformation of leisure in contemporary societies, tracing the emergent issues at stake in the discipline and examining Leisure Studies’ fundamental connections with cognate disciplines such as Sociology, Cultural Studies, History, Sport Studies and Tourism.

This book contains original work from key scholars across the globe, including those working outside the Leisure Studies mainstream. It showcases the state of the art of contemporary Leisure Studies, covering key topics and key thinkers from the psychology of leisure to leisure policy, from Bourdieu to Baudrillard, and suggests that leisure in the 21st century should be understood as centring on a new ‘Big Seven’ (holidays, drink, drugs, sex, gambling, TV and shopping). No other book has gone as far in redefining the identity of the discipline of Leisure Studies, or in suggesting how the substantive ideas of Leisure Studies need to be rethought. The Routledge Handbook of Leisure Studies should therefore be the intellectual guide of first choice for all scholars, academics, researchers and students working in this subject area.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

part I|94 pages

Key Disciplines

chapter 1|10 pages

Philosophy of Leisure 1

chapter 3|14 pages

Feminist Leisure Studies

Origins, accomplishments and prospects

chapter 5|9 pages

Economics of Leisure

chapter 6|11 pages

Leisure Management

Moving with the times

chapter 7|10 pages

Leisure Policy

The example of sport

chapter 8|15 pages

Research Positions, Postures and Practices in Leisure Studies

The example of sport

part II|93 pages

Key Thinkers

chapter 10|10 pages

The Leisure Class

From Veblen to Linder to MacCannell

chapter 12|8 pages

Michel Foucault and Leisure 1

chapter 13|9 pages

Leisure at the End of Modernity

Jürgen Habermas on the Purpose of Leisure

chapter 14|14 pages

Chris Rojek

chapter 15|15 pages

Two Sociologists

Pierre Bourdieu and Zygmunt Bauman

chapter 16|11 pages

What they did on their Holidays

Virilio, Baudrillard, Leisure Studies and post-theory

part III|102 pages

Leisure as a Socio-Cultural Phenomenon

part IV|80 pages

The Big Seven Leisure Pursuits

chapter 25|10 pages

The Annual Holiday

Its rise, transformations, expansion and fragmentation

chapter 26|11 pages

The Demon Drink

Alcohol and moral regulation, past and present

chapter 27|9 pages

From the Back Street to the High Street

Commercial gambling and the commodification of chance

chapter 28|12 pages

Leisure Sex

More sex! Better sex! Sex is fucking brilliant! Sex, sex, sex, Sex

chapter 31|15 pages

How Shopping Changed Leisure

part V|107 pages

Uses of Leisure

chapter 32|15 pages

Abnormal Leisure and Normalization

chapter 33|12 pages

Behind the Net-Curtain

Home-based work and leisure spaces

chapter 35|9 pages

Leisure and Higher Education

chapter 38|13 pages

Serious Leisure

The case of groundhopping

chapter 40|12 pages

Yin and Yang

The relationship of leisure and work 1

part VI|116 pages

New Directions

chapter 41|10 pages

Cultural Tourism

chapter 42|13 pages

Event Management

chapter 43|15 pages

Extreme Leisure

The case of extreme sporting activities

chapter 44|9 pages

Leisure, Community, and Politics

chapter 47|11 pages

Virtual Leisure

chapter 48|13 pages

Youth Culture, Leisure and Lifestyle

From subcultures to post-subcultures