|
|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Leisure Sciences journal,
this book focuses on where it and leisure sciences (as a field)
started and what the future might hold for both. The foremost
scholars in our field dialogue, debate, critique, and reflect on
leisure studies' progress and future. Authors consider and write
about the key issues and controversies of the field, developments
we should be celebrating, and directions of study we should be
pursing. Scholars also consider research gaps that exist in leisure
research, issues we should be thinking about, and where we are now
in relation to where previous projections expected. Topics in this
book include: race, ethnicity, immigration, and leisure; 'risky'
leisure research; critical leisure studies; leisure and social
isolation; radical leisure; and post-qualitative radical ontology.
The chapters were originally published as a special issue of
Leisure Sciences.
Feminisms in Leisure Studies acknowledges and advances the
contribution of feminist theories to leisure knowledge and
research. Building upon the strong history of feminist leisure
scholarship, the book reviews key feminist theories and offers an
overview of a fourth wave of feminism and its relevance to leisure.
Written by a team of leading international feminist scholars, each
chapter addresses a particular theoretical perspective, using
examples from each author's research to unpack methodological and
substantive issues essential to leisure studies. Critically, this
book moves beyond women, the emphasis of much gender scholarship to
date, to focus on issues of feminism as connected to leisure
scholarship more broadly. This book is an important and engaging
read for students and scholars of diversity, women's studies,
multiculturalism, social justice, gender studies, leisure studies,
LGBTQQ studies, and feminist research.
Feminisms in Leisure Studies acknowledges and advances the
contribution of feminist theories to leisure knowledge and
research. Building upon the strong history of feminist leisure
scholarship, the book reviews key feminist theories and offers an
overview of a fourth wave of feminism and its relevance to leisure.
Written by a team of leading international feminist scholars, each
chapter addresses a particular theoretical perspective, using
examples from each author's research to unpack methodological and
substantive issues essential to leisure studies. Critically, this
book moves beyond women, the emphasis of much gender scholarship to
date, to focus on issues of feminism as connected to leisure
scholarship more broadly. This book is an important and engaging
read for students and scholars of diversity, women's studies,
multiculturalism, social justice, gender studies, leisure studies,
LGBTQQ studies, and feminist research.
Celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Leisure Sciences journal,
this book focuses on where it and leisure sciences (as a field)
started and what the future might hold for both. The foremost
scholars in our field dialogue, debate, critique, and reflect on
leisure studies' progress and future. Authors consider and write
about the key issues and controversies of the field, developments
we should be celebrating, and directions of study we should be
pursing. Scholars also consider research gaps that exist in leisure
research, issues we should be thinking about, and where we are now
in relation to where previous projections expected. Topics in this
book include: race, ethnicity, immigration, and leisure; 'risky'
leisure research; critical leisure studies; leisure and social
isolation; radical leisure; and post-qualitative radical ontology.
The chapters were originally published as a special issue of
Leisure Sciences.
|
|