Visie & Beleidsplein

Leisure identities and interactions

leisure and recreation studies 1

Kelly, J.R. (1983). Leisure identities and interactions: leisure and recreation studies 1. London: George Allen & Unwin (Publishers) Ltd.

Leisure has too often been approached as a set of activities that people do when everything important has been completed. For this first text in the new 'Leisure and Recreation Studies' series John R. Kelly provides a different analysis, demonstrating the centrality of leisure to human development and to important relationships. In 'Leisure Identities and Interactions' Kelly analyzes leisure in the context of role changes through the life course, but also as a social context in which we work out the identities that express who we really want to be. His focus on the kinds of leisure that are both most common and most significant - fact-to-face encounters, family interaction, and episodes found in the midst of our roles and routines. Varieties of leisure styles are found te be developed out of available opportunities and in relation to cultural values, but also are chosen to express and negotiate our self-definitions. Leisure is both social and existential and can best be understood in the dialectic of role expectations and decision. Kelly utilizes symbolic interaction, interpretive, and dramaturgical metaphors to develop a different sociology of leisure - one that brings together the concepts of role and identity. Expressive identities and intimate communities are as essential to leisure as they are to life.

Uitgever(s): George Allen & Unwin (Publishers) Ltd,

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John Kelly

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sociologie
vrije tijd
vrijetijdsbesteding