Importance of being lazy / Al Gini.

By: Material type: TextPublication details: London : Routledge, 2005.Description: 182 pages cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0415978696
  • 9780415978699
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • BJ 1498 .G55 2005
Contents:
Prologue: The Project and the Problem -- 1. The Other Side of Leisure: Work, Damn it! -- 2. Leisure and Culture: The Importance of Being Lazy -- 3. Vacations and Traveling -- 4. Minivacations: The Weekend -- 5. Shopping as Leisure and Play -- 6. Sports and Play -- 7. The Ultimate Vacation: Retirement -- Epilogue: Sabbath as Metaphor.
Review: "The great American fantasy is about leisure: wooded getaways, Caribbean cruises, white-water rafting, the lights of Las Vegas. Yet one in four Americans does not take a vacation at all. We know how to work hard but not how to play." "What we really need, argues Al Gini, is some time off. The Importance of Being Lazy takes us on family road trips, to Disneyland, on shopping sprees, on extreme sports adventures, and into the ultimate vacation - retirement - showing why we venerate vacations and why "doing nothing" is a fundamental human necessity." "In a witty, breezy tour of our workaholic society, where the summer at the seashore has been supplanted by the long weekend, Gini draws on studies of Americans' vacation habits as well as interviews, personal stories, and the wry observations of philosophers, writers, and sociologists from Aristotle to Mark Twain to Thorstein Veblen." "Without true leisure, Gini says, we are diminished as individuals and as a society. The Importance of Being Lazy is our road map for learning how to play, doze, gaze, amble, and goof-off without guilt. Book jacket."--Jacket.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Book Storms Research Center Main Collection BJ 1498 .G55 2005 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 98652205

Originally published: 2003.

Prologue: The Project and the Problem -- 1. The Other Side of Leisure: Work, Damn it! -- 2. Leisure and Culture: The Importance of Being Lazy -- 3. Vacations and Traveling -- 4. Minivacations: The Weekend -- 5. Shopping as Leisure and Play -- 6. Sports and Play -- 7. The Ultimate Vacation: Retirement -- Epilogue: Sabbath as Metaphor.

"The great American fantasy is about leisure: wooded getaways, Caribbean cruises, white-water rafting, the lights of Las Vegas. Yet one in four Americans does not take a vacation at all. We know how to work hard but not how to play." "What we really need, argues Al Gini, is some time off. The Importance of Being Lazy takes us on family road trips, to Disneyland, on shopping sprees, on extreme sports adventures, and into the ultimate vacation - retirement - showing why we venerate vacations and why "doing nothing" is a fundamental human necessity." "In a witty, breezy tour of our workaholic society, where the summer at the seashore has been supplanted by the long weekend, Gini draws on studies of Americans' vacation habits as well as interviews, personal stories, and the wry observations of philosophers, writers, and sociologists from Aristotle to Mark Twain to Thorstein Veblen." "Without true leisure, Gini says, we are diminished as individuals and as a society. The Importance of Being Lazy is our road map for learning how to play, doze, gaze, amble, and goof-off without guilt. Book jacket."--Jacket.

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