Allen-Collinson, Jacquelyn and Hockey, John
(2015)
From a certain point of view: sensory phenomenological envisionings of running space and place.
Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 44
(1).
pp. 63-83.
ISSN 0891-2416
Full content URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241613505866
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Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
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Abstract
The precise ways in which we go about the mundane, repetitive, social actions of everyday life are central concerns of ethnographers and theorists working within the traditions of the sociology of the mundane and sociological phenomenology. In this article, we utilize insights derived from sociological phenomenology and the newly developing field of sensory sociology to investigate a particular, mundane, and embodied social practice, that of training for distance running in specific places: our favored running routes. For, despite a growing body of ethnographic studies of particular sports, little analytic attention has been devoted to the actual, concrete practices of “doing” or “producing” sporting activity, particularly from a sensory ethnographic perspective. Drawing upon data from a 2-year joint autoethnographic research project, here we explore the visual dimension, focusing upon three key themes in relation to our runners’ visualization of, respectively, (1) hazardous places, (2) performance places, (3) the time–space–place nexus.
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