Waiting for the Weekend

$15.00 CAD

pp. 260, “Rybczynski ( Home ) traces the evolution of the seven-day week back to the Babylonian calendar and, more recently, to the Great Depression, when the two-day weekend became institutionalized in the U.S., with shorter work hours viewed as an antidote to unemployment. The common 19th-century European practice of “keeping Saint Monday,” or not working on Monday, paved the way for the modern weekend, which the author sees as a reflection of our mechanized culture: “We want the freedom to be leisurely, but we want it regularly . . . like clockwork.” In an enchanting, strikingly profound meditation on the relationship between leisure and labor, Rybczynski investigates holy days, precursors of modern holidays, and sketches a social history of reading, TV-watching and gardening. His beautifully written book is full of interesting tidbits: the Japanese language has no word for leisure; 22 million Americans work more than 49 hours a week. “

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Book Information

ISBN 0670830011
ISBN13 9780670830015
Number of pages 260
Original Title Waiting for the Weekend
Published Date 1991
Book Condition Very Good
Jacket Condition Very Good
Binding Hardcover
Size 8vo
Place of Publication New York
Edition First Edition
Category:
Author:
Publisher:

Description

pp. 260, “Rybczynski ( Home ) traces the evolution of the seven-day week back to the Babylonian calendar and, more recently, to the Great Depression, when the two-day weekend became institutionalized in the U.S., with shorter work hours viewed as an antidote to unemployment. The common 19th-century European practice of “keeping Saint Monday,” or not working on Monday, paved the way for the modern weekend, which the author sees as a reflection of our mechanized culture: “We want the freedom to be leisurely, but we want it regularly . . . like clockwork.” In an enchanting, strikingly profound meditation on the relationship between leisure and labor, Rybczynski investigates holy days, precursors of modern holidays, and sketches a social history of reading, TV-watching and gardening. His beautifully written book is full of interesting tidbits: the Japanese language has no word for leisure; 22 million Americans work more than 49 hours a week. “

Additional information

Weight 0.85 kg