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  1. A nation's choice of leisure activities can tell you much about its national character, and Britain has seen a revolution in leisure since the war. Growing affluence, increased mobility...

  2. The freedom of leisure activities increases the possibility that new cultural activities and lifestyles will develop, understood by some as an innovative adaptation to the future, as illustrated by Margaret Mead’s (1972) concept of pre-figurative socialization.

  3. 7 de ene. de 2001 · For a critical account of these investigations, see C. Critcher, ‘Sociology, cultural studies and the post-war working class’, in J. Clarke, C. Critcher and R. Johnson (eds), Working-class Culture: Studies in History and Culture, London, Hutchinson, 1979, pp. 13-40.

  4. During the war the aims and contexts of industrial welfare and the provision of factory-based sport and leisure were changed and indirectly brought sport within the discourse of post-war social reconstruction. This paper explores the factors that led to this transition.

  5. 15 de dic. de 2012 · A nation's choice of leisure activities can tell you much about its national character, and Britain has seen a revolution in leisure since the war. Growing affluence, increased mobility and new technology have combined to give us a host of new opportunities for enjoying ourselves - but are we?

  6. This chapter examines changes in the sports sector in Great Britain during and after World War 2. It discusses the post-war planning made by sporting organisations and describes the practical difficulties experienced in maintaining sports during and after the war.

  7. A nation's choice of leisure activities can tell you much about its national character, and Britain has seen a revolution in leisure since the war. Growing affluence, increased mobility and new technology have combined to give us a host of new opportunities for enjoying ourselves - but are we?