Leisure Lifestyles Paper
Leisure is an important component of the American life. Many Americans derive immense pleasure, satisfaction, and fulfilment from leisure activities. While there are leisure activities common to Americans as a whole, leisure lifestyles tend to differ across groups, mostly in terms of age, gender, race, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic status. This paper compares and contrasts the leisure lifestyles of three selected groups: African Americans, Latinos, and gay men. The paper also pays attention to changes in leisure lifestyles among gay men in the last one and a half decades or so.
African American Leisure Lifestyles
African Americas have greatly shaped the American life. Without African Americans, many leisure activities present today would perhaps not be existent. African Americans’ leisure lifestyles have been largely influenced by their historical experiences, especially slavery and racial discrimination (Andrews, 2004). Due to lack of freedom, African Americans during the era of slavery had little or no time for leisure. Children mainly participated in roaming over the plantations of their masters, wading in the streams, fishing, hunting, as well as games such as pole jumping, rope jumping, marbles, and stilt walking. Humour, storytelling, singing, and art were also common leisure activities for African Americans during the slave era. Emancipation increased African Americans’ freedom, resulting in more time for leisure activities. African Americans also got an opportunity to pursue new leisure activities such as reading, conversing, dating, religious fellowship, picnics, as well as social events such as weddings. In the early 1900s, many African Americans migrated to the north fleeing racial hatred in the south. With improved socioeconomic status, African Americans became more involved in organised sports (such as basketball and baseball), music, and relaxation. Throughout the 20th century, against the backdrop of increased urbanisation, African Americans engaged in new leisure activities such as fashion, entertainment,...
References
Andrews, V. L. (2004). “African American Leisure Lifestyles,” Encyclopedia of Recreation and Leisure in America. Ed. Gary S. Cross. Vol. 1. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, p8-12.
Gomez, E. (2004). “Latino Leisure Lifestyles,” Encyclopedia of Recreation and Leisure in America. Ed. Gary S. Cross. Vol. 1. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, p500-504.
Romesburg, D. (2004). “Gay Men's Leisure Lifestyles,” Encyclopedia of Recreation and Leisure in America. Ed. Gary S. Cross. Vol. 1. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, p388- 391.
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