1st Edition
The Politics of Leisure
Introduction: Becoming Political—An Expanding Role for Critical Leisure Studies
Jeff Rose, Justin Harmon and Rudy Dunlap
1. A People’s History of Leisure Studies: Leisure, the Tool of Racecraft
Rasul A. Mowatt
2. Playing While Black
Harrison P. Pinckney IV, Corliss Outley, Aishia Brown and Daniel Theriault
3. Examining the Use of Leisure for the Sociopolitical Development of Black Youth in Out-of-School Time Programs
Aishia Brown, Corliss Outley and Harrison P. Pinckney IV
4. Urban Subversion and Mobile Cinema: Leisure, Architecture and the "Kino-Cine-Bomber"
Brett D. Lashua and Simon Baker
5. Home of (or for?) Champions? The Politics of High-Performance/Elite and Community sport at New Zealand’s Home of Cycling
Damion Sturm and Robert E. Rinehart
6. Ordinary Political Conversation in Seemingly Nonpolitical Leisure: All Talk and No Action?
Troy D. Glover
7. We Aren’t So Different After All: Differences and Similarities Between Political Affiliation and Issues of Park Use, Management, and Privatization
J. Tom Mueller, Andrew J. Mowen and Alan R. Graefe
Conclusion: Momentarily Understanding the Contemporary Moment—Reflections on Koans, Politics, and Leisure
B. Dana Kivel
Biography
Rudy Dunlap is Professor in the Department of Health and Human Performance at Middle Tennessee State University. His research addresses leisure as a sociocultural context for community development and social change. His previous projects have explored volunteer participation in community gardening and experiences of urban cycling.
Justin Harmon is Assistant Professor in the Department of Community and Therapeutic Recreation at UNCG. His research focuses primarily on community, health and aging, and the use of leisure for coping for people with serious and terminal diseases, and the use of music for affecting quality of life.
Jeff Rose is Assistant Professor-Lecturer in the Department of Parks, Recreation, and Tourism at the University of Utah. His research employs qualitative and spatial methods to examine systemic inequities expressed through class, race, political economy, and relationships to nature.






