Occupational Devotion Finding Satisfaction and Fulfillment at Work

Occupational Devotion: Finding Satisfaction and Fulfillment at Work by Robert Stebbins, published by Anthem Press in 2022, explores the concept of occupational devotion within the framework of serious leisure. This edition, comprising 98 pages, delves into how devotee work, characterized by its appeal and fulfillment, contrasts with the more common experiences of disagreeable work and casual leisure activities. The book examines the sectors where such devoted occupations thrive, including liberal professions, consulting, craft trades, and creativity-based small businesses.
Readers will find a detailed analysis of the dynamics between serious leisure and devotee work, highlighting the challenges faced by individuals striving to turn their passions into livelihoods. The text discusses the realities of pursuing these fulfilling occupations, including the potential for failure and the necessity of perseverance. Stebbins presents a nuanced view of the rewards and costs associated with these serious pursuits, emphasizing that while they offer significant satisfaction, they also come with challenges that must be navigated. This exploration is relevant to those interested in labor, economics, and sociology, providing insights into the intersection of work and personal fulfillment.
Official synopsis Publisher
The idea of occupational devotion, or devotee work, was conceptualized and incorporated in the serious leisure perspective as one of the two serious pursuits. The other pursuit is serious leisure itself, with both forms being anchored in activities that are immensely appealing and fulfilling. Despite such desirable qualities the serious pursuits constitute a minority of all work and leisure, these two domains being dominated by disagreeable work and hedonic casual leisure activities.
The devotee occupations serve as full-time or part-time livelihoods for people fortunate enough to have found them. Such work has so far been observed to exist in four sectors of the economy: the liberal professions, consulting occupations, craft-like trades, and creativity-based small businesses. In ways to be set out in the coming chapters, devotee work roots in serious leisure, and many participants in the latter have no desire to pursue the former. Moreover, some of those who do “quite their day job” to try to make a living at their leisure passion fail to achieve this dream and are forced to return to pure amateur, hobbyist, or career volunteer status. That is, these aspirants fail to make enough money to live as they need to, whether at a level of poverty or near-poverty (eg, the starving artist), passable living, or comfortable living.
Neither type of serious pursuit offers an unalloyed life of positiveness. Nevertheless, both are hugely attractive, even while the enthusiasts invariably face some costs and unpleasant requirements that weigh against the powerful rewards. So it is that, unlike casual leisure, perseverance and effort number among the defining qualities of the serious pursuits.
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