2020
DOI: 10.1177/1012690219894939
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‘Doing’ competitive swimming: Exploring the skilled practices of the competitive swimming lifeworld

Abstract: Despite a developing literature on various facets of sporting embodiment, there is currently a research lacuna with regard to in-depth analyses of actually ‘doing’ sporting activities within specific physical cultures. In this article, we address that gap by drawing on a developing theoretical literature in sociological phenomenology to investigate a particular physical–cultural domain. Here, we present and analyse data from an ethnographic study of competitive swimmers undertaken in the UK. Responding to call… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Katri's comments above resonate strongly with research by McNarry et al (2020aMcNarry et al ( , 2020b that similarly demonstrates the 'embracing' and normalisation of sustained 'hard training' in performance swimming, as part of the 'endurance work' (Allen-Collinson et al, 2018;McNarry et al, 2020a) that characterises many sports requiring a level of endurance and tolerance of heavy training loads. Katri admits that there are some days when she is feeling fatigued, but then she reminds herself that 'in the end, you are doing this for yourself'.…”
Section: Living Up To the Perfect Idealmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Katri's comments above resonate strongly with research by McNarry et al (2020aMcNarry et al ( , 2020b that similarly demonstrates the 'embracing' and normalisation of sustained 'hard training' in performance swimming, as part of the 'endurance work' (Allen-Collinson et al, 2018;McNarry et al, 2020a) that characterises many sports requiring a level of endurance and tolerance of heavy training loads. Katri admits that there are some days when she is feeling fatigued, but then she reminds herself that 'in the end, you are doing this for yourself'.…”
Section: Living Up To the Perfect Idealmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Bonde, 2009), discourse analysis (e.g. Dowling, 2020), longitudinal research incorporating socio-narratological and mapping methods (Barker-Ruchti et al, 2014Schubring et al, 2019), ethnography (Lenneis et al, 2020;McNarry et al, 2020;Williams & Gibson, 2017), arts-based, creative and sensorial research (e.g. Sparkes, 2017;Svendler Nielsen, 2009;Williams, 2018aWilliams, , 2020Williams & Annandale, 2020;Winther, 2018), narrative and biographical methods (Caddick et al, 2015;Dowling, 2012Dowling, , 2020Phoenix & Griffin, 2013;Phoenix & Smith, 2011) and visual methods (Degerbøl & Nielsen, 2015;Orr & Phoenix, 2015;Phoenix, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These immediate feelings obtained from our bodies, such as from our senses, can be called embodied experiences (Johnson, 1999; Sparkes, 2009). A growing body of studies have explored varied embodied sporting experiences, such as risk, pain and injury, time and space, and aesthetic, sensuous and gendered feelings, through the phenomenological lens (Allen-Collinson, 2003, 2009, 2011b; Allen-Collinson and Hockey, 2001; Chisholm, 2008; Hockey and Allen-Collinson, 2007; Inglis and Hughson, 2000; Liu and Howe, 2012; McNarry et al, 2020; Wessinger, 1994; Woodward, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of the most influential contributions to phenomenologically informed empirical studies of sport came from Allen-Collinson and colleagues (e.g. Allen-Collinson, 2009; Allen-Collinson and Hockey, 2010, 2017; Hockey and Allen-Collinson, 2007; McNarry et al, 2020). In one study, they drew on Merleau-Ponty’s concept of perception to explore haptic perception in running and scuba diving and of the surrounding world (Allen-Collinson and Hockey, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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