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Children’s leisure lives are changing, with increasing dominance of organised activities and screen-based leisure. These shifts have reconfigured parenting practices, too. However, our current understandings of these processes are race-blind and based mostly on the experiences of white middle-class families. Drawing on an innovative study of middle-class British Indian families, this book brings children’s and parents’ voices to the forefront and bridges childhood studies, family studies and leisure studies to theorise children’s leisure from a fresh perspective. Demonstrating the salience of both race and class in shaping leisure cultures within middle-class racialised families, this is an invaluable contribution to key sociological debates around leisure, childhoods and parenting ideologies.
Utsa Mukherjee is Lecturer in Education at Brunel University London.
1. Introduction2. Critical Sociology of Children’s Leisure: A Framework3. Concerted Cultivation the Indian Way? Organised Leisure and Racial Parenting Strategy4. The Fun, the Boring and the Racist Name Calling: How Children Make Sense of their Leisure Geographies5. Negotiated Temporalities: Leisure, Time-Use and Everyday Life6. Relating, Place-Making, and the Cultural Politics of Leisuring7. Concluding Thoughts
'With its methodology, engaging analysis, and critical insights, Race, Class, Parenting and Children’s Leisure is a significant contribution to contemporary sociological debates and an essential read for anyone interested in childhood, migration, and structured leisure.' Leisure Studies