DiscoverMusing Mind PodcastBen Hunnicutt: Leisure, the (Forgotten) Basis of American Progress
Ben Hunnicutt: Leisure, the (Forgotten) Basis of American Progress

Ben Hunnicutt: Leisure, the (Forgotten) Basis of American Progress

Update: 2020-07-22
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My guest today is the historian and professor of leisure studies at the University of Iowa, Ben Hunnicutt.


His scholarship focuses on a simple, perplexing question: why, after 100 years of shortening working weeks, did America abandon the pursuit of leisure?


I feverishly read two of his books - Work Without End, and Free Time: The Forgotten American Dream - that chronicle the history of the relationship between America’s political economy and the pursuit of leisure time for all.


He brings the precision of a historian together with the sensibility of a poet (nowhere more visible than his deep study of Walt Whitman) to make sense of a fascinating time period during which America changed its mind.


In our conversation, we cover:



  • The history of the ideas of shorter working weeks and leisure time from 1830 until today.




  • The difference between “economic progress” and “higher progress”.




  • How children who spend more time at play grow into adults better suited to handle leisure time




  • The psychologies of labor and leisure




  • Strategies to reintroduce leisure into the U.S. political economy.




Enjoy!

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Ben Hunnicutt: Leisure, the (Forgotten) Basis of American Progress

Ben Hunnicutt: Leisure, the (Forgotten) Basis of American Progress

Oshan Jarow