Author: Elihu Katz
Publisher:
Published: 1976
Total Pages: 288
ISBN-13: 9780674796775
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: Max Kaplan
Publisher: Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press
Published: 1991
Total Pages: 196
ISBN-13: 9780838634172
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →A collection of 12 previously published or delivered essays by well- known sociologist, Kaplan. Includes an autobiographical sketch; his views on leisure as it relates to aging, ethics, tourism, the arts, outdoor recreation; and a review of the current scholarship. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Author: Hillel Ruskin
Publisher: Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press
Published: 1984
Total Pages: 210
ISBN-13: 9780838631348
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Participants at an international conference on leisure contribute to this multidisciplinary volume which seeks better public policy decision making on the problems generated by the abundance of leisure in advanced technological societies.
Author: Chris Rojek
Publisher: SAGE
Published: 1995-03-08
Total Pages: 228
ISBN-13: 9780803988132
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →This book explores the meaning of leisure in the context of key social formations of our time. Chris Rojek brings together the insights of feminsim, Marxism, Weber, Elias, Simmel, Nietzsche and Baudrillard to produce a survey - and rethinking - of leisure theory. At the same time he presents a radical critique of the traditional 'centring' of leisure, on 'escape', 'freedom' and 'choice'. Revealing how leisure practices have responded to living in a risk society, he shows that 'free' time becomes something very different when simulation and nostalgia lie at the heart of everyday life.
Author: Steven N. Waller
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
Published: 2015-09-17
Total Pages: 198
ISBN-13: 149906473X
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Leisure and Fellowship in the Life of the Black Church explores why leisure and fellowship in congregational life of African American churches matters. The book provides a biblical and theological foundation for the concepts of work, rest, Sabbath, play, leisure and fellowship. Moreover, the book explores how religious tradition and doctrine shape and constrains our attitudes and behaviors about leisure, fellowship and living abundantly. Several churches are lifted as exemplars based on the way that they embrace leisure and fellowship within their respective congregations. In the closing chapters, the book examines what leisure and fellowship might be like in Heaven and how we engage Christ and each other in congregations.
Author: Steve Bruce
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Published: 2013-01-10
Total Pages: 256
ISBN-13: 0191612189
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →The decline in power, popularity and prestige of religion across the modern world is not a short-term or localized trend nor is it an accident. It is a consequence of subtle but powerful features of modernization. Renowned sociologist, Steve Bruce, elaborates the secularization paradigm and defends it against a wide variety of recent attempts at rebuttal and refutation. Using the best available statistical and qualitative evidence Bruce considers the implications for the
Author: Virginia Krause
Publisher: University of Delaware Press
Published: 2003
Total Pages: 244
ISBN-13: 9780874138351
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →"Throughout this study, idleness is shown to be a key element of self-presentation beginning with the figure of the idle aristocrat. The extravagant display of a life of leisure made Gilles de Rais the icon of aristocratic idleness. But even the hardworking humanist was anxious to assume a studied posture of idleness. If both figures were eager to display idleness, it was because oisivete was an important source of what modern theorists have termed symbolic capital. Finally, the Renaissance also saw the birth of a new figure of the "idler": the consumer of leisure. For it was leisure itself along with chivalric and amorous adventure that was consumed by the readers of the popular Amadis series. At once a commodity and form of capital, idleness (otium) clearly belonged to the realm of social exchanges ostensibly reserved for affairs (negotium)."--BOOK JACKET.
Author: Robert Snape
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Published: 2018-04-05
Total Pages: 256
ISBN-13: 1350003034
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →In the final decades of the nineteenth century modernizing interpretations of leisure became of interest to social policy makers and cultural critics, producing a discourse of leisure and voluntarism that flourished until the Second World War. The free time of British citizens was increasingly seen as a sphere of social citizenship and community-building. Through major social thinkers, including William Morris, Thomas Hill Green, Bernard Bosanquet and John Hobson, leisure and voluntarism were theorized in terms of the good society. In post-First World War social reconstruction these writers remained influential as leisure became a field of social service, directed towards a new society and working through voluntary association in civic societies, settlements, new estate community-centres, village halls and church-based communities. This volume documents the parallel cultural shift from charitable philanthropy to social service and from rational recreation to leisure, teasing out intellectual influences which included social idealism, liberalism and socialism. Leisure, Robert Snape claims, has been a central and under-recognized organizing force in British communities. Leisure, Voluntary Action and Social Change in Britain, 1880-1939 marks a much needed addition to the historiography of leisure and an antidote to the widely misunderstood implications of leisure to social policy today.
Author: Jörg Stolz
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2016-06-23
Total Pages: 310
ISBN-13: 1134800126
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →This landmark study in the sociology of religion sheds new light on the question of what has happened to religion and spirituality since the 1960s in modern societies. Exposing several analytical weaknesses of today's sociology of religion, (Un)Believing in Modern Society presents a new theory of religious-secular competition and a new typology of ways of being religious/secular. The authors draw on a specific European society (Switzerland) as their test case, using both quantitative and qualitative methodologies to show how the theory can be applied. Identifying four ways of being religious/secular in a modern society: 'institutional', 'alternative', 'distanced' and 'secular' they show how and why these forms have emerged as a result of religious-secular competition and describe in what ways all four forms are adapted to the current, individualized society.