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Time for Play

Time for Play

Recreation and moral issues in colonial South Australia

Denis Molyneux

The Eight Hour movement, established in the middle of the 1800s, began the transition for workers from an industrial revolution work ethic to a more balanced approach to the working week. The young colony of South Australia was at the forefront of these changes.

The last four decades of the ninetenth century witnessed a significant growth of leisure hours for South Australians, especially working class males. It was accompanied by an upsurge in both formal and informal recreation activity. This owed much to major advances in communication during the period - in personal transport by road, rail, steamship and, later, the ubiquitous bicycle; to the network of telegraph stations, and to the growth of newspapers and specialist journals. These developments stimulated a demand for recreation activities.

However, not all sections of the South Australian community looked favourably on these developments. Religious and political forces combined to target the new leisure, particularly when it touched on the 'social evils' of intemperance, gambling and improper behaviour on Sundays. A further constraint was contemporary attitudes to matters of dress and conduct: these were particularly severe on women.

Time for Play examines these developments in the colony, and shows how they improved the lot of first the working class, and eventually, society as a whole.

Winner of the 2016 Maurice Keain Medal for South Australian Historical Publication

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Denis Molyneux was born in 1925 in Braunston, Northamptonshire, UK and grew up in Welwyn, Hertfordshire. He was educated at Queen Elizabeth’s School, Barnet. After service in the Fleet Air Arm he attended the University of Birmingham and later the University of Newcastle, completing an MA in history in 1957. He joined the Physical Education Department of the University of Birmingham in 1958. As well as teaching roles he has served in various central and local government positions in England and South Australia relating to recreation planning and development. He was made a Member of the Order of Australia in 2005 for sport and recreation services for disabled persons. In 2009 he completed a PhD in social history at the University of Adelaide. Denis Molyneux lives with his wife in Leabrook, South Australia.

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ISBN   9781743053744
CATEGORY   
IMAGES   16 pp of greyscale photographs
PAGE COUNT   232
DIMENSIONS   210 x 135 mm