CONCEPT
The Failure of Leisure
Juliet Schor’s diagnosis of the institutional collapse of non-productive time—the erosion of the cultural norms, social structures, and economic conditions that would make rest genuinely satisfying and genuinely free from the implicit threat of professional consequence.
Genuine leisure is not merely the absence of work. It is a positive condition requiring institutional support: cultural norms that validate non-productive time, social structures that provide frameworks for non-economic engagement, and an internal capacity to experience time outside production as satisfying rather than threatening.
Juliet Schor’s concept of the failure of leisure identifies the systematic erosion of all three supports in the American economy, producing a condition in which rest has ceased to be a viable alternative to work not because workers are lazy or undisciplined but because the institutional infrastructure for non-productive time has been defunded to the point where the attempt at rest produces anxiety rather than recovery. Cultural norms in the knowledge economy have reached the point where rest is not merely undervalued but suspect: the developer who works weekends is celebrated, the one who does not is questioned, and the language of rest has been colonized by the language of productivity (“recovery,”