'Conspicuous leisure' is a term introduced by the American economist
Thorstein Veblen, in ''
The Theory of the Leisure Class (
1899)''. The term denotes visible leisure for the sake of displaying social status. The term generally reserved for those forms of leisure that seem to be fully motivated by social factors, such as taking long vacations to exotic places and bringing souvenirs back. Conspicuous leisure is a symptom observed in individuals in all societies where
stratification exists. Veblen's more well-known "
conspicuous consumption" is a type of conspicuous leisure.
Veblen argued that conspicuous leisure had extremely deep historical roots reaching back into prehistory, and that it "evolved" into different forms as time passed. One example he gave was how, during the
Middle Ages, the
nobility was exempted from manual labor, which was reserved for
serfs.