背景(考古学)
地球仪
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)
大流行
社会学
自治
民族志
疏远
唯物主义
心理学
公共关系
地理
政治学
认识论
医学
神经科学
法学
考古
传染病(医学专业)
病理
疾病
人类学
哲学
作者
Marianne Clark,Deborah Lupton
出处
期刊:Convergence
[SAGE]
日期:2021-09-28
卷期号:27 (5): 1222-1237
被引量:39
标识
DOI:10.1177/13548565211042460
摘要
The implementation of physical distancing measures and lockdowns across the globe to control the spread of COVID-19 has led to the home becoming a focal point of exercise and fitness activities for many people. A plethora of digital tools were hastily assembled to help people workout at home or in spaces close to home: including apps with workout suggestions, online videos and livestreamed fitness classes. In this article, we draw on our empirical material collected through semi-structured interviews and virtual ethnographic home tours with Australian adults to explore the ‘pandemic fitness assemblages’ generated with and through their improvised pandemic fitness practices inside and outside their homes. These materials illustrate how bodies, digital and non-digital technologies, and place and space came together and help to surface the affects, sensations and embodiments that emerged. We describe how people’s re-imagined fitness practices contributed to daily routines, transformed the atmospheres of the home and yielded affective experiences of escape. To do so, we think with sociospatial and feminist materialism theoretical frameworks that emphasise the generative relationships emerging between human and more-than-human forces and entities. Our analysis further illuminates the situatedness and relationality of these heterogeneous forces and considers how they come to matter within the broader sociomaterial context of COVID-19.
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