1998
DOI: 10.1080/00222216.1998.11949828
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Leisure in the Lives of Old Lesbians: Experiences with and Responses to Discrimination

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Cited by 41 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…They also highlighted how the women were able to create supportive networks to escape from and resist homophobic and agist attitudes, however, which is a finding consistent with feminist leisure researchers' argument that leisure can be a context for resistance (e.g., Wearing, 1998). While Jacobson and Samdahl's (1998) study examined the ways old lesbians created private leisure spaces, this study highlights the ways in which an all-women's group-with the safety of the granny mask-enabled the study participants to resist devaluing social discourses associated with being older women.…”
Section: Social Activism and Healthmentioning
confidence: 58%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…They also highlighted how the women were able to create supportive networks to escape from and resist homophobic and agist attitudes, however, which is a finding consistent with feminist leisure researchers' argument that leisure can be a context for resistance (e.g., Wearing, 1998). While Jacobson and Samdahl's (1998) study examined the ways old lesbians created private leisure spaces, this study highlights the ways in which an all-women's group-with the safety of the granny mask-enabled the study participants to resist devaluing social discourses associated with being older women.…”
Section: Social Activism and Healthmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…Ideologies associated both with what it means to be a woman and to be old have the potential to place formidable constraints on what is considered "acceptable" leisure behavior of older women (Wearing, 1995). For example, Jacobson and Samdahl (1998) documented how public leisure settings were painful sources of stigma and discrimination for old lesbians. They also highlighted how the women were able to create supportive networks to escape from and resist homophobic and agist attitudes, however, which is a finding consistent with feminist leisure researchers' argument that leisure can be a context for resistance (e.g., Wearing, 1998).…”
Section: Social Activism and Healthmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Leisure and gender issues, of course, began to grab attention and leveled significant challenges to assumptions about the benevolence of leisure (see, for instance, Bray, 1988). Since then, feminist theorizing and research has clearly led the way for this kind of undertaking (see, for instance, Henderson et al, 1989;Henderson, 1996;Jacobson& Samdahl, 1998;Parry & Shaw, 1999;Shaw, 1994). Work in this realm is dedicated to asking why leisure cannot be, or is not, at the forefront of generating social change.…”
Section: Leisure Research: Understanding and Fostering Social Changementioning
confidence: 96%
“…In fact, of the 28 articles reviewed for this study, we found that 14 used the terminology older (Bayliss, 2000;Comerford, Henson-Stroud, Sionainn, & Wheeler, 2004;Fullmer et al, 1999;Hall & Fine, 2005;Hash & Netting, 2009;Jacobson, 1995;Jones & Nystrom, 2002;Neustifter, 2008;Parks & Hughes, 2007;Pettinato, 2008;Richard & Brown, 2006;Shenk & Fullmer, 1996;Wojciechowski, 1998;Zaritsky & Dibble, 2010). Six articles used the term old (Barnes, 2005;Cruikshank, 2008;Drumm, 2004;Healey, 1994;Jacobson & Samdahl, 1998;Lev, 2009), three articles used aging or ageing (Phillips & Marks, 2008;Thompson, Brown, Cassidy, & Gentry, 1999;Tully, 1989), one used elder (Goldberg et al, 2005), one used elderly (Healy, 2002), one referred to their 50-to 60-year-old participants as later midlife (Finnegan & McNally, 2000) and another stated their participants were late middle age and old (Butler & Hope, 1999). Nystrom and Jones (2003) used different terms depending on which chronological group they discussed but mainly used aging and old.…”
Section: Terminologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite these numbers, older lesbians are a near invisible group in current society (Bayliss, 2000;Fullmer, Shenk, & Eastland, 1999;Healey, 1994;Healy, 2002;Jacobson & Samdahl, 1998;Shenk & Fullmer, 1996;Wojciechowski, 1998). Our culture's tendency to assume and ascribe heterosexuality in all its members leads to the marginalization of lesbians in general.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%