Dereifying family leisure: An examination of women's and men's everyday experiences and perceptions of family time
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Leisure Sciences
- Vol. 14 (4) , 271-286
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01490409209513174
Abstract
The dominant ideologically based view of family leisure as fun for all may obscure the work associated with family activities and the unequal distribution of such work. In this time‐budget and interview study, the time that 46 families spent in family activities was analyzed by examining how much of this time was work and how much was leisure from the parents’ viewpoint. The data show that family activities were often experienced as work or involved a work component. Moreover, the mothers were significantly more likely than the fathers to experience family time (with spouse present) and time with children (with spouse absent) as work and less likely to report these situations to be leisure, x2(3, N = 728) 65.07, p < .01, and x2(3, N = 510) 34.93, p < .01, respectively. Thus, although family activities have some positive benefits and are valued by parents, they do involve work and this work is unequally divided between women and men. The contradictory aspects of family leisure, especially for women, are discussed in terms of the ethic of care as well as the ideology of familism.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Women, leisure and familism: relationships and isolation in small town CanadaLeisure Studies, 1991
- The Ethic of Care: Leisure Possibilities and Constraints for WomenLoisir et Société / Society and Leisure, 1991
- A sense of entitlement to leisure as constraint and empowerment for womenLeisure Sciences, 1991
- Commodification and consciousness: An initial studyLeisure Studies, 1991
- Women’s Leisure, What Leisure?Published by Springer Nature ,1990
- Factors affecting the division of labor in householdsSex Roles, 1988
- Reconceptualizing barriers to family leisureLeisure Sciences, 1987
- Gender and Power Use: An Experimental Analysis of Behavior and PerceptionsSocial Psychology Quarterly, 1985
- “Together is Better”, A Model for the Development of a National Family Recreation ProgramWorld Leisure & Recreation, 1985
- Theoretical and Methodological Issues in the Use of Decision-Making as an Indicator of Conjugal Power: Some Canadian ObservationsCanadian Journal of Sociology / Cahiers canadiens de sociologie, 1978