Literature DB >> 32593513

'Social health', 'physical health', and well-being: Analysing with bourdieusian concepts the interplay between the practices of heavy drinking and exercise among young people.

Jukka Törrönen1, Eva Samuelsson2, Filip Roumeliotis3, Robin Room4, Ludwig Kraus5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The article examines the interplay between the practices of heavy drinking and exercise among young people. The comparison helps to clarify why young people are currently drinking less than earlier and how the health-related discourses and activities are modifying young people's heavy drinking practices.
METHODS: The data is based on interviews (n = 56) in Sweden among 15-17-year-olds and 18-19-year-olds. By drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's concepts of habitus, field, and capital, we examine what kinds of resources young people accumulate in the fields of heavy drinking and exercise, how these resources carry symbolic value for distinction, and what kind of health-related habitus they imply.
RESULTS: The analysis shows that young people's practices in the social spaces of intoxication and exercise are patterned around the 'social health' and 'physical health' approaches and shaped by gendered binaries of masculine dominance. The 'physical health' approach values capable, high-performative, and attractive bodies, whereas the 'social health' approach is oriented towards accumulating social capital. The analysis demonstrates that these approaches affect the interviewees' everyday life practices so that the 'physical health' approach has more power over the 'social health' approach in transforming them.
CONCLUSION: As the 'physical health' approach appears to modify young people's practices of drinking to be less oriented to intoxication or away from drinking, this may partly explain why young people are drinking less today than earlier. Compared to drinking, the physical health-related social spaces also seem to provide more powerful arenas within which to bolster one's masculine and feminine habitus. This further suggests that intoxication may have lost its symbolic power among young people as a cool activity signalling autonomy, maturity, and transgression of norms.
Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bourdieu; Capital; Decline in drinking; Exercise; Field; Gender; Habitus; Health; Intoxication; Qualitative interviews; Young people

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32593513     DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2020.102825

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Drug Policy        ISSN: 0955-3959


  2 in total

1.  17 Is the New 15: Changing Alcohol Consumption among Swedish Youth.

Authors:  Jonas Raninen; Michael Livingston; Mats Ramstedt; Martina Zetterqvist; Peter Larm; Johan Svensson
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-01-31       Impact factor: 3.390

2.  Response to commentaries: (de)normalization of drinking and its implications for young people, sociality, culture and epidemiology.

Authors:  Gabriel Caluzzi; Michael Livingston; John Holmes; Sarah MacLean; Dan I Lubman; Paul Dietze; Rakhi Vashishtha; Rachel Herring; Amy Pennay
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2022-02-28       Impact factor: 7.256

  2 in total

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