Literature DB >> 28990198

Exploring parkrun as a social context for collective health practices: running with and against the moral imperatives of health responsibilisation.

G R Wiltshire1, Simone Fullagar1, Clare Stevinson2.   

Abstract

Critiques of public health policies to reduce physical inactivity have led to calls for practice-led research and the need to reduce the individualising effects of health promotion discourse. The purpose of this paper is to examine how parkrun - an increasingly popular, regular, community-based 5 km running event - comes to be understood as a 'health practice' that allows individuals to enact contemporary desires for better health in a collective social context. Taking a reflexive analytical approach, we use interview data from a geographically diverse sample of previously inactive parkrun participants (N = 19) to explore two themes. First, we argue that parkrun offers a space for 'collective bodywork' whereby participants simultaneously enact personal body projects while they also experience a sense of being 'all in this together' which works to ameliorate certain individualising effects of health responsibilisation. Second, we examine how parkrun figures as a health practice that makes available the subject position of the 'parkrunner'. In doing so, parkrun enables newly active participants to negotiate discourses of embodied risk to reconcile the otherwise paradoxical experience of being an 'unfit-runner'. Findings contribute to sociological understandings of health and illness through new insights into the relation between health practices and emerging physical cultures, such as parkrun.
© 2017 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness.

Entities:  

Keywords:  embodiment; exercise/activity; health behaviour; lifestyles; medicalisation; population health

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28990198     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12622

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  7 in total

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3.  Exploring the potential for introducing home monitoring of blood pressure during pregnancy into maternity care: current views and experiences of staff-a qualitative study.

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4.  What Encourages Physically Inactive People to Start Running? An Analysis of Motivations to Participate in Parkrun and City Trail in Poland.

Authors:  Ewa Malchrowicz-Mośko; Patxi León-Guereño; Miguel Angel Tapia-Serrano; Pedro Antonio Sánchez-Miguel; Zbigniew Waśkiewicz
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2020-11-17

5.  Responsibility in Medical Sociology: A Second, Reflexive Look.

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6.  Fatigue Induced Changes in Muscle Strength and Gait Following Two Different Intensity, Energy Expenditure Matched Runs.

Authors:  Sherveen Riazati; Nick Caplan; Marcos Matabuena; Philip R Hayes
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7.  Exploring the benefits of participation in community-based running and walking events: a cross-sectional survey of parkrun participants.

Authors:  Helen Quirk; Alice Bullas; Steve Haake; Elizabeth Goyder; Mike Graney; Chrissie Wellington; Robert Copeland; Lindsey Reece; Clare Stevinson
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2021-11-02       Impact factor: 3.295

  7 in total

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