Details
Fitness Doping
Trajectories, Gender, Bodies and Health
85,59 € |
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Verlag: | Palgrave Macmillan |
Format: | |
Veröffentl.: | 25.06.2019 |
ISBN/EAN: | 9783030221058 |
Sprache: | englisch |
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Beschreibungen
<p>This book compiles several years of multi-faceted qualitative research on fitness doping to provide a fresh insight into how the growing phenomenon intersects with issues of gender, body and health in contemporary society. </p>
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<p>Drawing on biographical interviews, as well as online and offline ethnography, Andreasson and Johansson analyse how, in the context of the global development of gym and fitness culture, particular doping trajectories are formulated, and users come into contact with doping. They also explore users’ internalisation of particular values, practices and communications and analyse how this influences understandings of the self, health, gender and the body, as well as tying this into wider beliefs regarding individual freedom and the law.</p>
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<p>This insight into doping goes beyond elite and organised sports, and will be of interest to students and scholars across the sociology of sport, leisure studies, and gender and body politics. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>Drawing on biographical interviews, as well as online and offline ethnography, Andreasson and Johansson analyse how, in the context of the global development of gym and fitness culture, particular doping trajectories are formulated, and users come into contact with doping. They also explore users’ internalisation of particular values, practices and communications and analyse how this influences understandings of the self, health, gender and the body, as well as tying this into wider beliefs regarding individual freedom and the law.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>This insight into doping goes beyond elite and organised sports, and will be of interest to students and scholars across the sociology of sport, leisure studies, and gender and body politics. </p>
<p></p><p><b>Part I: Contextualising Fitness Doping.- </b>Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Doping – Historical and Contemporary Perspectives.- Chapter 3. Glocal Fitness Doping.- <b>Part II: Doping Trajectories.- </b>Chapter 4: Images of (Ab)users.- Chapter 5: (Un)becoming a Doper User.- Chapter 6. Fitness Doping Online.- <b>Part III: Doped Bodies and Gender.- </b>Chapter 7: Re-conceptualizing Doping and Masculinity.- Chapter 8. Female Fitness Doping.- <b>Part IV: Conclusions.- </b>Chapter 9. Trajectories and the New Doping Demography.- Chapter 10. Research Design and Methodological Considerations.</p><p></p>
<p>Jesper Andreasson is Associate Professor of Sport Science at Linnaeus University, Sweden.</p><p>Thomas Johansson is Professor of Child and Youth Studies at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.</p><br><br>
<p>This book compiles several years of multi-faceted qualitative research on fitness doping to provide a fresh insight into how the growing phenomenon intersects with issues of gender, body and health in contemporary society.</p><p> </p><p>Drawing on biographical interviews, as well as online and offline ethnography, Andreasson and Johansson analyse how, in context of the global development of gym and fitness culture, particular doping trajectories are formulated, and users come into contact with doping. They also explore users’ internalisation of particular values, practices and communications and analyse how this influences understandings of the self, health, gender and the body, as well as tying this into wider beliefs regarding individual freedom and the law.</p><p> </p><p>This insight into doping goes beyond elite and organised sports, and will be of interest to students and scholars across the sociology of sport, leisure studies, and gender and body politics.</p>
Investigates and identifies different processes by which a person becomes and unbecomes a “fitness doper" Problematises and challenges the gender politics that have traditionally been attached to fitness doping (trajectories) Analyses the processes by which dichotomies such as masculinity/femininity, criminal/legal, and healthy/unhealthy are negotiated and destabilised by users, both online and offline