Thorpe Holly, Jeffrey Allison, Fullagar Simone, Pavlidis Adele
University of Waikato, New Zealand.
University of Alberta, Canada.
J Sport Soc Issues. 2023 Feb;47(1):3-35. doi: 10.1177/01937235221109438.
This paper explores the gendered, disruptive effects and affective intensities of COVID-19 and the ways that women working in the sport and fitness sector were prompted to establish more-than-human connection through technologies, the environment, and objects. Bringing together theoretical and embodied insights from object interviews with 17 women sport and fitness professionals (i.e., athletes, coaches, instructors) in Aotearoa New Zealand, this paper advances a relational understanding of the multiple human and nonhuman forces that shape and transform women's wellbeing during pandemic. Drawing upon particular feminist materialisms (i.e., Barad, Braidotti, Bennett), we reconceptualize wellbeing to move beyond biomedical formulations of health or illness. Through our analysis and discussion, we trace embodied ways of knowing that produce wellbeing as a more-than-human entanglement, a gendered phenomenon that can be understood as an ongoing negotiation of affective, material, cultural, technological and environmental forces during a period of disruption and uncertainty.
本文探讨了新冠疫情的性别化、颠覆性影响及情感强度,以及体育和健身行业的女性如何通过技术、环境和物品建立超越人类的联系。本文结合了对新西兰17名女性体育和健身专业人士(即运动员、教练、指导员)进行对象访谈的理论见解和具体体验,提出了一种关系性理解,即多种人类和非人类力量在疫情期间塑造和改变女性幸福感的方式。借鉴特定的女性主义物质主义(即巴拉德、布莱多蒂、贝内特),我们重新定义了幸福感,以超越健康或疾病的生物医学表述。通过我们的分析和讨论,我们追踪了产生幸福感的具体认知方式,将其视为一种超越人类的纠葛,这是一种性别化现象,可理解为在一段混乱和不确定时期,情感、物质、文化、技术和环境力量的持续协商。