Digging in: the sociological phenomenology of ‘doing endurance’ in distance-running

Hockey, John and Allen-Collinson, Jacquelyn (2015) Digging in: the sociological phenomenology of ‘doing endurance’ in distance-running. In: Endurance running: a socio-cultural examination. Routledge Research in Sport, Culture and Society (51). Routledge, London / New York, pp. 227-242. ISBN 9781138810426

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Item Type:Book Section
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Abstract

In this chapter we draw on a theoretical and methodological approach to the study of endurance and the lived distance-running body: sociological phenomenology, which to date has been relatively under-utilised in sports studies generally. Given the highly embodied nature of endurance running as lived experience, the phenomenological quest to uncover and explore the essential structures of embodied experience seems highly applicable. Here, for those unfamiliar with its tenets, we introduce a ‘sociologized’ variant of the phenomenological approach (see Allen-Collinson, 2011b, for a discussion), and situate our own research within the context of a literature we have been developing on the sociological phenomenology of distance running (Hockey, 2005; Hockey & Allen-Collinson, 2007; Allen-Collinson, 2009; Allen-Collinson & Hockey, 2011; 2013). We then describe the autoethnographic and autophenomenographic project on distance-running, from which our data derive. The project’s findings are subsequently theorised, drawing upon insights from sociological phenomenology, and phenomenologically-inspired work, such as that of Drew Leder (1990). Leder’s (1990) notion of corporeal ‘dys-ease’ is particularly apposite in exploring ‘doing endurance’ in distance running, where the body is at times brought acutely and forcibly to the forefront of consciousness in training and racing, during experiences of ‘intense embodiment’ (Allen-Collinson & Owton, 2014). Enduring, as a particular mode of being-in-the-world is not just an individual phenomenon, but is shared by and communicated between distance runners, constituting an interactional subcultural practice.

Keywords:Sociology, sociological phenomenology, Phenomenology, Sport, Endurance, Distance running, Embodiment
Subjects:C Biological Sciences > C600 Sports Science
L Social studies > L300 Sociology
Divisions:College of Social Science > School of Sport and Exercise Science
ID Code:19247
Deposited On:25 Oct 2015 14:44

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