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Wright,
J. (2000). Bodies, meaning and movement: A comparison of the
language of a physical education lesson and a Feldenkrais
Movement class. Sport, Education & Society, 5(1), 35-
50.
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Abstract:
In Western
societies since (and probably before) Descartes, the human
body has been objectified and alienated from the self, something
to be subdued, managed and more recently worked upon as symbol
of self-value. Sport and exercise are sites where the objectification
of the body has been traditionally promoted. In recent times
with the scientisation of elite sport and the commodification
of bodies in sport, the objectification of the body has taken
new forms and achieved greater prominence. Physical education
as the school site for body work has been implicated in the
process of objectification and alienation. The traditional
practices of physical education, including choices in teacher
language, position bodies as objects, and movement as an instrumental
outcome of practice. Not all movement practices, however,
subscribe to this approach. This paper will compare the language
practices of teachers in a physical education lesson and a
Feldenkrais movement class as these constitute different forms
of embodiment, different selves. Its purpose is to provide
further resources for critical reflection on the ways in which
pedagogical practices position students and contribute to
the shaping of particular forms of subjectivity.
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