Publication | Closed Access
Race, Class, and Leisure Activity Preferences: Marginality and Ethnicity Revisited
221
Citations
23
References
1994
Year
EthnicityLeisure StudyEducationRacial StudyMarginalized Groups StudiesSocial SciencesRaceAfrican American StudiesRacial GroupRacial EquityU.s. AdultsSocial IdentitySocial ClassSocial CharacteristicLeisure StudiesSociologyLeisure Activity PreferencesClass AnalysisClass AwarenessRace RelationSocial Diversity
Interest‑group theory of class identification suggests that people who identify similarly in social class may share leisure preferences. The study investigates whether race, leisure preferences, and class awareness are related among U.S. adults. The authors used a national probability survey of 1,607 U.S.
This study examines the relationship between race, leisure preferences, and class awareness. Based on interest-group theory of class identification, we hypothesized that blacks and whites who define themselves similarly in terms of social class would exhibit similar leisure activity preferences. Data to test this hypothesis came from a national probability survey of 1,607 U.S. adults. The results of the analysis showed similarities in leisure preferences between blacks and whites who defined themselves as middle class. Patterns of leisure preferences, however, tended to diverge among blacks and whites who defined themselves as poor or working class. This divergence was attributed in part to differences between black and white females of the poor or working class.
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