北京
政治
闲暇时间
共产主义
合法性
干预(咨询)
中国
工作(物理)
步伐
政治学
共产主义国家
公共关系
社会学
公共行政
经济增长
法学
心理学
经济
体力活动
工程类
地理
精神科
物理医学与康复
机械工程
医学
大地测量学
标识
DOI:10.1080/21567689.2021.1995715
摘要
Following the takeover of Beijing in 1949, the Chinese Communist Party started to provide public cultural goods for youth by organizing collective leisure activities, mostly on weekends and holidays. From 1953, the authorities took a more interventionist approach when they held collective leisure activities more often on an everyday basis after the Party realized that leisure was a field for Communist education. Although the Party expected youth to live in a planned and regular way, discontent sprang up in 1956 when young people found they could not master their leisure time because there were too many mandatory activities, and many work units forced people to attend organized leisure activities collectively. The Party, as a result, decided to ‘let people plan their time freely’ by reducing unnecessary meetings in leisure time, allowing voluntary participation of leisure activities, and letting Party committees make overall leisure arrangements in local work units. Instead of challenging the legitimacy of political intervention in their leisure time, young people got accustomed to a new pace of life favoured by the regime: doing the right things at the right time, in the right place.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI