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Title: Leisure In America Thematic PowerPoint Project


1
Leisure In AmericaThematic PowerPointProject
  • By Dhev Patel
  • Period 6
  • 10/20/10

2
Before 1500-1800
3
Native American Leisure
4
Oral Traditions
  • Native Americans have always had a deep respect
    for animals and nature and have long included
    them as the main characters in stories and
    legends passed down for generations.
  • These stories served as entertainment for tribes,
    usually including explanations for natural
    phenomena.
  • They often had morals, and also taught young
    tribe members about animals and nature and
    fostered a respect for the natural world.

5
Drawings/Paintings
  • Some Native American tribes used pictographs
    (ancient drawings or paintings) as a form of
    written communication and also a form of art.
  • They were often painted on tepees on clothing,
    and cave walls.
  • This allowed tribes to share and pass on stories
    and to record historical events.

6
Games
  • Historically, games were an important part of
    Native American culture.
  • Some games were restricted to men, some to women,
    and some were open to all, including young and
    old.
  • There were games of chance and games of skill.
  • They were not always just for amusement, but also
    to learn and to gain or improve many skills and
    to hone the senses.
  • Games have been played for learning,
    entertainment and even for worship. They are a
    way of handing down tradition and knowledge to
    other generations.
  • Native American children (Sioux particularly)
    played games that aided in their future as a
    scout or hunter.

7
Games continued
  • Winners of games were highly respected in the
    tribe. Native Americans are thought to have
    invented a lot of team games or sports, including
    lacrosse.
  • These games often taught cooperation and
    encouraged social interaction within tribes and
    with other tribes. One early explorer who came to
    North America described seeing a game of lacrosse
    in which hundreds of players took part.
  • The stick game was played by the Iroquois tribe,
    and tested the throwing accuracy of tribe
    members.
  • The Iroquois and many other eastern tribes also
    played the rock game and it tested cleverness and
    skills in planning.

8
Adult Native American Activities
  • On many occasions the Native Americans would buy
    alcohol from the Europeans after they had sold
    them the winters fur they had obtained in the
    forest and become highly intoxicated. As in
    modern society many people drink after a long
    hard day of work to relax, as so did the Indians.
  • Gambling was a form of entertainment enjoyed by
    adults.
  • Betting took place on many games of dexterity
    like the various ball games.

9
Gambling continued
  • There was one gambling game that was particularly
    popular Bowl and Dice. The dice were circular
    discs made from bone or antler, with one side
    plain and one side ornamental. This game was
    simple in its play, yet complicated in the way
    the score was kept. The dice were tossed in a
    bowl, and sticks were awarded for getting five or
    six dice with the same side showing. Counting
    sticks of various sizes were awarded. These
    sticks were placed in piles, which kept track of
    how much they were worth. Bowl and Dice was often
    played in a large gaming house made from poles
    set in the ground and covered with tree boughs.
    Indians of New England played this game in the
    1600s for animal skins, furs, kettles or axes.

10
Celebrations
  • The Pueblo Indians had feast day celebrations,
    which often include dances in brilliant attire
    and sacred rituals.
  • Celebrations were known to be carried out by many
    Native American Tribes and was even set on
    specific days such as holidays we have know

11
Indian Children Leisure
  • Little Indian girls played with dolls that were
    fashioned from corn stalks, cattails, corncobs
    and other indigenous materials. Little girls
    decorated and beaded cradleboards and dolls'
    clothing. Girls also constructed dolls' mats and
    tiny wigwams, and in doing so, were being trained
    by their mothers.
  • Young boys had small bows, slings, spears and
    fishing equipment to play with. As the boys
    became older they learned to make these things
    for themselves and to use them for hunting small
    prey.

12
Indian Children Leisure continued
  • There were many games but few toys in the Native
    American culture. The Buzzer was a toy and it was
    constructed of a circular piece of bone or antler
    with two holes in the center. It was threaded
    with a piece of sinew. The sinew was attached to
    small pieces of bone or wood that were used as
    handles. The child would grasp the handles and
    alternately pull and relax the sinew making the
    circular piece spin and buzz.
  • Native American children (Sioux particularly)
    played games that aided in their future as a
    scout or hunter. Feasts would be held for many
    reasons, which would include eating, dancing, and
    singing.

13
Colonial Leisure
14
Music/Poetry
  • The musical and poetic entertainment 13th century
    was about courtly love, troubadours, and
    minstrels, minnesingers, who sang and played for
    the people, high and low, across Europe.
  • They sang about King Arthur and Guinevere,
    Lancelot, Sir Gawain, Galahad. These are names
    that have not been forgotten. Imagine hearing
    about them for the first time from people who
    sang popular music of the day.
  • The Nibelungenlied was new in the 13th century.
    People like Walter von derVogelweide and Wolfram
    von Eschenbach were writing music and poetry.
  • Dante Alighieri wrote many masterpieces in the
    time period and created the visions of hell.

15
Theater
  • The theater was moving away from purely
    liturgical themes and purely moralizing to drama
    of "manners," meaning secular theater.
  • The musical comedy, Jeu de Robin et Marion, by
    Adam de la Halle, dates from this time. The
    entertainment of the 13th century had something
    that earlier entertainment of the Middle Ages was
    lacking by comparison, which was new and exciting
    material, and lots of it.
  • In the early 18th century most towns did not have
    a purpose built theatre. Plays were staged in
    buildings like inns. The late 18th century
    theatres were built in most towns.

16
Games
  • Colonial societies played a game called ninepins.
    Ninepins is closely related to our form of
    bowling with minor differences. Ninepins would be
    placed three in a row on the lawn and the object
    was to knock down all ninepins with a ball. The
    slope of the lawn made the game tricky.
  • Males Females played competitive sorts like
    different forms of basketball.
  • Dangerous games were also a huge part of the
    times, such as knife and tomahawk throwing,
    running, and shooting.
  • But people of colonial times were also interested
    in healthy activities as well, such as walking,
    swimming, and horse racing.
  • The three most popular card games that people
    played during colonial times were piquet, euchre,
    and whist. Both Piquet and Euchre were introduced
    by the French and brought over to early colonial
    times where it was picked up immediately.

17
New Modern Games
  • A kind of cricket was played long before the 18th
    century but at that time it took on its modern
    form. The first cricket club was formed at
    Hambledon in Hampshire about 1750, which struck
    to colonists has another way to entertain
    themselves with their friends family.
  • Horse racing was carried on for centuries before
    18th century but at this time it became a
    professional sport. The Jockey Club was formed in
    1727. The Derby began in 1780.
  • John Spilsbury made the first jigsaw puzzle in
    1767. He intended to teach geography by cutting
    maps into pieces but soon people began making
    jigsaws for entertainment.

18
New ModernGames continued
  • Late 18th century the circus became a popular
    form of entertainment.
  • Reading was also a popular pastime and the first
    novels were published at this time. Books were
    still expensive but in many towns you could pay
    to join a circulating library.

19
Cruel forms of Leisure
  • Many people enjoyed cruel 'sports' like
    cockfighting and bull baiting. (A bull was
    chained to a post and dogs were trained to attack
    it). Rich people liked fox hunting.
  • Public executions were also popular and they drew
    large crowds.

20
Adult Leisure
  • Smoking clay pipes was popular in the 18th
    century. As well as Taking snuff.
  • The colonists who were wealthy would go on back
    to their motherland, England, and vacation for a
    while.
  • Also in the 18th century rich people visited
    spas. They believed that bathing in and/or
    drinking spa water could cure illness. At the end
    of the 18th century wealthy people began to spend
    time at the seaside. (Again they believed that
    bathing in seawater was good for your health).

21
Children inColonial Societies
  • Children in Colonies spent their leisure time
    playing marbles, spun tops, flew kites, and
    played tag.
  • Girls specifically played with dolls, they also
    liked to sing and play blind mans bluff.
  • One popular outdoor game was rolling the hoop.
    Taking a big wooden hoop, the children would race
    each other from one point to another on the lawn.
    The object of the game was to see who could get
    to the finishing point fastest.

22
African Leisure
23
Traditional
  • The African slave communities in coastal Georgia
    practiced their traditional dance, song, and
    story to New World circumstances.
  • African Slaves also found reconnections in
    traditional arts such as woodworking, iron
    making, and weaving.
  • In America, slaves re-created African Instruments
    such as the banjo, and mastered the art of the
    European violin guitar.
  • One of the most important developments of the
    18th century was the invention of African
    American language. The two most important
    dialects were Gullah and Geeche.

24
Culinary Arts
  • African American culinary arts are responsible
    for such southern specialties as barbecue, fried
    chicken, black-eyed peas, and various greens
    including collard and mustard.

25
Terms
26
Terms 1st submission
  • 1.Lacrosse-Sport played with netted stick
  • 2.Comedy-Humorus play, movie, book
  • 3.Gambling- Betting, (Native Americans used
    goods)
  • 4.Jousting- Medieval Tournament
  • 5.Troubadours- medieval poet or singer

27
Terms 2nd Submission
  • 1.Ninepins- Similar to bowling, Ninepins would be
    placed three in a row on the lawn and the object
    was to knock down all ninepins with a ball. The
    slope of the lawn made the game tricky.
  • 2.Pictographs-An ideogram that conveys its
    meaning through its pictorial resemblance to a
    physical object.
  • 4.Piqute- A old French card game that had only
    two players and 32 cards.
  • 5.Cradelboards- The cradleboard provided a secure
    and safe environment for the small baby. The baby
    was kept in the cradleboard at all times. This
    helped to keep the child's backbone and legs
    straight, further strengthen the neck muscles,
    and provide an opportunity for the infant to be
    visually and emotionally stimulated by his
    environment and family. The child could be
    carried on his mother's back using a strap
    attached to the back of the cradleboard. This
    way, the mother could be free to work with her
    hands.

28
Terms 3rd Submission
  • 1.Snuff- ground or pulverized tobacco, which is
    generally insufflated or "snuffed" through the
    nose. It is a type of smokeless tobacco. There
    are several types, but traditionally it means
    Dry/European nasal snuff. In the United States
    and Canada, "snuff" can also refer to dipping
    tobacco, which is applied to the gums rather than
    inhaled.
  • 2.Cricket- Bat-and-ball team sport. Many
    variations exist, with its most popular form
    played on an oval-shaped outdoor arena known as a
    cricket field at the centre of which is a
    rectangular 22-yard (20.12 m) long pitch that is
    the focus of the game. A game (or match) is
    contested between two teams of eleven players
    each. One team bats, and will try to score as
    many runs as possible while the other team bowls
    and fields, trying to dismiss the batsmen and
    thus limit the runs scored by the batting team.
    The striking batsman hitting the ball with his
    bat, running to the opposite end of the pitch and
    touching the crease there without being
    dismissed, scores a run. The teams switch between
    batting and fielding at the end of an innings.
  • 3.Draughts-checkers is a group of abstract
    strategy board games between two players which
    involve diagonal moves of uniform pieces and
    mandatory captures by jumping over the enemy's
    pieces.
  • 4.Backgammon- One of the oldest board games for
    two players. The playing pieces are moved
    according to the roll of dice, and players win by
    removing all of their pieces from the board.
    There are many variants of backgammon, most of
    which share common traits. Backgammon is a member
    of the tables family, one of the oldest classes
    of board games in the world.
  • 5.Comedy-Humorous play, movie, book.

29
People
30
Dante Alighieri
  • The man who created the visions of hell in his
    novels such as Dantes Inferno. Born into a
    Florentine family of noble ancestry. Little is
    known about Dante'schildhood, but the city where
    he spent the first 38 years of his life was an
    important cultural and political center. Dante's
    mother, Bella degliAbati, died when he was seven
    years old. His father, Alighiero II, made his
    living by money-lending and renting of property.
    After the death of his wife he remarried, but
    died in the early 1280s, before the future poet
    reached manhood

31
Walter von derVogelweide
  • Walter von derVogelweide- He started to write
    about music and poetry in the 13th century and
    was the Greatest German lyric poet. Of knightly
    birth, Walther was educated at a monastery school
    and served masters in several courts. His poetry
    goes far beyond the artificial conventions
    followed by other minnesingers by introducing an
    element of realism. He emphasizes the virtues of
    the balanced life, in both the social and the
    personal spheres. More than half of his
    approximately 200 extant poems are political,
    moral, or religious the rest are love poems,
    among them the popular "Unterder Linden."

32
William Shakespeare
  • William Shakespeare lived for 52 years. In just
    23 years, between approximately 1590 and 1613, he
    is attributed with writing 38 plays, Famous
    Shakespearean sonnets and 5 other poems. He is
    the most widely read of all Authors and the
    popularity of the Life and Works of Shakespeare,
    in English speaking countries, is second only to
    the bible. Some of his most famous work are
    Romeo and Juliet, and Hamlet.

33
Edmund Spenser
  • Edmund Spenser was a English poet who was born in
    London around 1552. He is best known for The
    Faerie Queene, an epic poem and fantastical
    allegory celebrating the Tudor dynasty and
    Elizabeth I. He is recognized as one of the
    premier craftsmen of Modern English verse in its
    infancy, and one of the greatest poets in the
    English language. He was educated in London at
    the Merchant Taylors School and matriculated as
    a sizar at Pembroke college, Cambridge. Since
    1591-1596 he had produced 20 pieces of
    literature.

34
John Spilsbury
  • "For the purpose of teaching geography," John
    Spilsbury, a teacher in England, created the
    first jigsaw puzzle in the year 1767. Adhering
    his maps to flat hardwood, he used a fine saw to
    cut along the borders of the European countries,
    and the jigsaw puzzle was born. Hand-painted and
    made of wood, the puzzle was a map of England and
    Wales, with each county making up a separate
    piece.

35
Richard Cumberland
  • Richard Cumberland-Dramatic and miscellaneous
    writer Richard Cumberland was born February,
    1732, and died May, 1811. The son of Dr. Denison
    Cumberland, Bishop of Kilmore, he was educated at
    Westminster and Cambridge, and was successively
    private secretary to Lord Halifax, Crown agent
    for Nova Scotia, assistant-secretary (and
    afterwards secretary) to the Board of Trade.

36
Multiple Choice Questions
  • 1.How did Native Americans obtain alcohol?
  • A) Traded Fur B) Stole it C) killed for it D)
    Begged for it
  • 2.Why Did Native Americans praise so highly on
    the animals around them?
  • A) Because they feared them B) They respected
    them C) They were their pets
  • D) It was their law
  • 3.What is unique about how Indians pass down
    information over generations of time?
  • A) Nothing B) All done orally C) They had
    pictographs D) By music
  • 4.What was the musical and poetic entertainment
    of the 13th century about?
  • A) Anger B) Envy C) Abhorring D) Courtly Love
  • 5.What game was invented by the Indians and is
    widely known and played today?
  • A) Soccer B) Golf C) Tennis D) Lacrosse
  • 6.Dante entertained the known world with what?
  • A) Poetry B) Boxing C) Visions of Hell D)
    Visions of peace

37
Multiple Choice Questions continued
  • 7.The theater was moving away from purely
    liturgical themes and purely moralizing to what
    in the 13th century?
  • A) Action B) Drama C) Comedy D) Horror
  • 8. The Iroquois and many other eastern tribes
    played what game in order to improve cleverness
    and skills in planning?
  • A) The Maze Game B) The Rock Game C) The Fire
    Game D) The Water Game
  • 9.Which one does not apply to European 13th
    century leisure?
  • A) Sleeping B) Archery Contest C) Hunting D)
    Jousting Tournaments
  • 10. Native Americans played games for leisure and
    other reasons, which one doesnt apply?
  • A) Learning B) Entertainment C) Effort D)
    Worship
  • 11. What activity was most popular for men and
    women doing together?
  • A) Hunting B) Boxing C) Drinking D) Running

38
Multiple ChoiceQuestions continued
  • 12.Young Indian Boys played with all of the
    following except?
  • A )Cradleboards B) Slings C) Spears D) Small
    bows
  • 13. Native Americans held feasts for special
    occasions, which would include all of the
    following except?
  • A) Singing B) Fighting C) Dancing D) Eating
  • 14.African American culinary arts are responsible
    for all of the following southern specialties
    except?
  • A) Barbecue B) Fried Chicken C) Black-eyed
    peas D) Mash Potatoes
  • 15. Recreation for men involved many of the
    spectator sports, all of the following are
    correct except for?
  • A) Baiting B) Fishing C) Boxing D)
    Cockfighting
  • 16. All of the following were the most popular
    card games played during the colonial period
    except?
  • A) Piquet B) Euchre C) Whist D) Wolf

39
Multiple Choice Questions continued
  • 17. African Slaves found reconnections in
    traditional arts in America, which of the
    following is incorrect?
  • A) Playing Games B) Woodworking C) Iron
    making D) Weaving
  • 18. Colonial societies played a game called
    ninepins, which is similar to what modern game?
  • A) Bowling B) Soccer C) Fishing D) Lacrosse
  • 19. Colonists did all of the following for
    recreation except?
  • A) Weaving B) Watch Operas C) Played Board
    Games D) Gamble
  • 20.In America, slaves re-created African
    instruments such as which of the following?
  • A) Banjo B) Violin C) Guitar D) Piano
  • 21.Which of the following is a traditional game
    played in colonial society?
  • A) Chess B) Bull Baiting C) The Rock Game D)
    Jigsaw

40
Multiple ChoiceQuestions continued
  • 22.Richard Cumberland wrote all of the following
    except?
  • A) The Choleric Man B) The summers Tale C) The
    clouds D) The Natural Son
  • 23.Who created the Jigsaw puzzle?
  • A) Harry Potter B) John Spilsbury C) Richard
    Cumberland D) Thomas Jefferson
  • 24. Backgammon is played between how many
    players?
  • A) 5 B) 3 C) 2 D) 4
  • 25. Cricket is what kind of sport?
  • A) Soccer B) Baseball C) Football D) Tennis
  • 26. What is snuff?
  • A) Tobacco B) A game C) A City D) Food

41
Multiple ChoiceQuestions continued
  • 27. Draughts is similar to what game?
  • A) Checkers B) Chess C) Backgammon D) Tennis
  • 28. Where were most plays staged during the early
    18th century?
  • A) Theatre B) Inns C) Town hall D) Gardens
  • 29. The Jockey Club was formed in what year?
  • A) 1720 B) 1726 C) 1724 D) 1727
  • 30. What year did Richard Cumberland die?
  • A) 1811 B)1810 C) 1809 D)1812

42
Multiple ChoiceQuestions Answers
  • 1.A 11.C 21.A
  • 2.B 12.A 22.D
  • 3.B 13.B 23.B
  • 4.D 14.D 24.C
  • 5.D 15.B 25.B
  • 6.C 16.D 26.A
  • 7.B 17.A 27.A
  • 8.B 18.A 28.B
  • 9.A 19.A 29.D
  • 10.C 20.A 30.A

43
References
  • http//cwx.prenhall.com
  • http//www.luminarium.org/renlit/spenser.htm
  • http//www.pagat.com/notrump/piquet.html
  • http//www.unr.edu/nnap/nt/f-12.htm
  • http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1a
    /Codex_Manesse_Walther_von_der_Vogelweide.jpg
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walther_von_der_Vogel
    weide

44
References continued
  • http//www.localhistories.org/games.html
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snuff
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cricket
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draughts
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backgammon
  • http//www.theatredatabase.com/18th_century/richar
    d_cumberland.html
  • www.google.com
  • www.wikianswers.com
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