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Reconceptualising play: Balancing childcare, extra‐curricular activities and free play in contemporary childhoods.

Authors :
Holloway, Sarah L.
Pimlott‐Wilson, Helena
Source :
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers; Sep2018, Vol. 43 Issue 3, p420-434, 15p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

This paper rethinks geographical approaches to children's play in the Global North. One narrowly conceived strand of past research considered the erosion of outdoor free play, but overlooked children's views of alternative play environments (e.g., out‐of‐school activities). A separate thread examined the feminisation of employment and growth in childcare, but investigations into children's play in care‐based environments are rare, and explorations of their ability to balance different play landscapes are lacking. This paper builds on insights from both lines of research, and challenges their deficiencies, to map out a more broadly conceived geography of play. Drawing on rigorous quantitative and qualitative research with middle‐ and working‐class parents and children, the paper examines the socially differentiated reconciliation of neighbourhood, extra‐curricular and care‐based play in contemporary British childhoods. The analysis highlights stark class differences in the balance between these play environments. Middle‐class children's elective engagement in extra‐curricular activities results in reduced outdoor free play, but they have little control over the total time they play in care environments. Working‐class children have greater experience of playing out, but are underscheduled as they have less than desired access to play in structured activities and wraparound care. In conclusion, the paper argues that geographers must: (1) move beyond the romanticisation of free play and recognise children's right to participate in a diversity of playful spaces; (2) embrace an intergenerational approach which recognises that play is not a matter for children alone – adults can facilitate as well as limit play, but reliance on women's unpaid labour makes play a feminist issue; and (3) uncover play's role in social reproduction as wider inequalities emerge in, and are reproduced through, children's landscapes of play in times of austerity, whether as here in terms of class, or along other axes of social differentiation or location. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00202754
Volume :
43
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
131115952
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12230