Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 224
Trim: 6¼ x 8½
978-0-8304-1576-2 • Paperback • January 2002 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Jearold Winston Holland is associate professor and chair of the Department of Recreation Management and Therapeutic Recreation at the University of Wisconsin at La Crosse.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Prologue: Race, Culture, Equality, and Recreation in America
Chapter 3 Before Slavery
Chapter 4 During Slavery
Chapter 5 The Antebellum Period
Chapter 6 Life, Recreation, and Leisure After Slavery
Chapter 7 Entertainment After Slavery
Chapter 8 Separate and Unequal
Chapter 9 Race and Public Recreation
Chapter 10 Blacks and Commercial Recreation
Chapter 11 Black Recreation in Focus
Chapter 12 After Separate-but-Equal
Chapter 13 The 1990s and into he Twenty-First Century
—Presents and analyzes the dominant Black recreation theories
—Highlights Black recreation prior to slavery
—Examines play and recreation of American slaves, their children, and free Blacks before, during, and after slavery
—Explores recreation of Blacks after slavery and during the separate-but-equal period and provides information regarding parks and playgrounds, leadership, libraries, radio and television, swimming pools, and the Black Church
—Discusses Black recreation after the separate-but-equal period, including the impact of the National Park and Recreation Association, and the Ethnic Minority Society, and analyzes the relationship between quality of life and recreation involvement.