Publication | Closed Access
Gender, race, and subjective social class and their association with leisure preferences
99
Citations
34
References
1995
Year
Leisure StudyStatus AttainmentEducationClass Polarization PerspectiveSocial StratificationSocial SciencesRaceGender DisparityGender StudiesSubjective Social ClassAfrican American StudiesBlack WomenRacial GroupSocial InequalitySocial IdentitySocial ClassSocial ConditionLeisure PreferencesSocial CharacteristicFamily EconomicsLeisure StudiesSociologyClass AnalysisSocial Diversity
Abstract This study examines the leisure preferences of subgroups defined by gender, race, and subjective social class. The multiple hierarchy stratification perspective and the class polarization perspective provided the theoretical rationale for the study, and a secondary data set from a national probability telephone survey was used. The interviews obtained information regarding the leisure preferences of adults age 21 to 65. From 2,148 contacts, 1, 711 interviews were completed. The results provide partial support for the study's hypotheses. Poor‐working‐class Black women were distinct from White men and women and middle‐class Black men, but they were similar to the other Black groups. As hypothesized, the leisure preferences of middle‐class Black and White men were similar. However, contrary to the study's hypothesis, Black men of different classes did not exhibit greater dissimilarity when compared with Black women of different classes.
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