•  1369
    Reflexivity and bracketing in sociological phenomenological research: Researching the competitive swimming lifeworld
    with Gareth McNarry and Adam Evans
    Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health 11 (1): 38-51. 2019.
    In this article, following on from earlier debates in the journal regarding the ‘thorny issue’ of epochē and bracketing in sociological phenomenological research, we consider more generally the challenges of engaging in reflexivity and bracketing when undertaking ethnographic ‘insider’ research, or research in familiar settings. We ground our discussion and illustrate some of the key challenges by drawing on the experience of undertaking this research approach with a group of competitive swimmer…Read more
  •  826
    Weather-wise? Sporting embodiment, weather work and weather learning in running and triathlon
    with George Jennings, Anu Vaittinen, and Helen Owton
    International Review for the Sociology of Sport 54 (7): 777-792. 2019.
    Weather experiences are currently surprisingly under-explored and under-theorised in sociology and sport sociology, despite the importance of weather in both routine, everyday life and in recreational sporting and physical–cultural contexts. To address this lacuna, we examine here the lived experience of weather, including ‘weather work’ and ‘weather learning’, in our specific physical–cultural worlds of distance-running, triathlon and jogging in the United Kingdom. Drawing on a theoretical fram…Read more
  •  93
    Embodiment in high-altitude mountaineering: Sensing and working with the weather
    with Lee Crust and Christian Swann
    Body and Society 25 (1): 90-115. 2019.
    In order to address sociological concerns with embodiment and learning, in this article we explore the ‘weathering’ body in a currently under-researched physical-cultural domain. Weather experiences, too, are under-explored in sociology, and here we examine in depth the lived experience of weather and, more specifically, ‘weather work’ and ‘weather learning’ in one of the most extreme and corporeally challenging environments on earth: high-altitude mountains. Drawing on a theoretical framework o…Read more
  •  944
    To be or not to be phenomenology? That is the question
    with Adam Evans
    European Journal for Sport and Society 16 (4): 295-300. 2019.
    Recent years have seen a burgeoning in phenomenological research on sport, physical cultures and exercise. As editors and reviewers, however, we frequently and consistently see social science articles that claim to be ‘phenomenological’ or to use phenomenology, but the reasons for such claims are not always evident. Indeed, on closer reading, many such claims can often turn out to be highly problematic. At this point, we should clarify that our ‘terrain de sport’ constitutes what has been termed…Read more
  •  1075
    Introduction: Over the past twenty-five years the sporting body has been studied in a myriad of ways including via a range of feminist frameworks (Hall 1996; Lowe 1998; Markula 2003; George 2005; Hargreaves 2007) and gender-sensitive lenses (e.g. McKay 1994; Aoki 1996; Woodward 2008). Despite this developing corpus, studies of sport only rarely engage in depth with the ‘flesh’ of the lived sporting and exercizing body (Wainwright and Turner 2003; Allen-Collinson 2009) at least from a phenomenolo…Read more
  •  90
    Learning in sport: From life skills to existential learning
    with Noora Ronkainen, Kenneth Aggerholm, and Tatiana Ryba
    Sport, Education and Society 25. 2020.
    Youth sport is habitually promoted as an important context for learning that contributes to a person’s broader development beyond sport-specific skills. A growing body of research in this area has operated within a life skills discourse that focuses on useful, positive and decontextualised skills in the production of successful and adaptive citizens. In this paper, we argue that the ideological discourse of life skills, underpinned by ideas about sport-based positive youth development, has undul…Read more
  •  994
    Sensory sociological phenomenology, somatic learning and 'lived' temperature in competitive pool swimming
    with Gareth McNarry and Adam Evans
    The Sociological Review 68. 2020.
    In this article, we address an existing lacuna in the sociology of the senses, by employing sociological phenomenology to illuminate the under-researched sense of temperature, as lived by a social group for whom water temperature is particularly salient: competitive pool swimmers. The research contributes to a developing ‘sensory sociology’ that highlights the importance of the socio-cultural framing of the senses and ‘sensory work’, but where there remains a dearth of sociological exploration i…Read more
  •  1222
    Endurance work’: embodiment and the mind-body nexus in the physical culture of high-altitude mountaineering
    with Lee Crust and Christian Swann
    Sociology 52 (6): 1324-1341. 2018.
    The 2015 Nepal earthquake and avalanche on Mount Everest generated one of the deadliest mountaineering disasters in modern times, bringing to media attention the physical-cultural world of high-altitude climbing. Contributing to the current sociological concern with embodiment, here we investigate the lived experience and social ‘production’ of endurance in this sociologically under-researched physical-cultural world. Via a phenomenological-sociological framework, we analyse endurance as cogniti…Read more
  •  2338
    Sporting embodiment: sports studies and the (continuing) promise of phenomenology
    Qualitative Research in Sport and Exercise 1 (3): 279-296. 2009.
    Whilst in recent years sports studies have addressed the calls ‘to bring the body back in’ to theorisations of sport and physical activity, the ‘promise of phenomenology’ remains largely under-realised with regard to sporting embodiment. Relatively few accounts are grounded in the ‘flesh’ of the lived sporting body, and phenomenology offers a powerful framework for such analysis. A wide-ranging, multi-stranded, and interpretatively contested perspective, phenomenology in general has been taken u…Read more
  •  101
    Identity Change: Doctoral students in art and design
    with John Hockey
    Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 4 (1): 77-93. 2005.
    For over a decade, practice-based research degrees in art and design have formed part of the United Kingdom research degree education portfolio, with a relatively rapid expansion in recent years. This route to the PhD still constitutes an innovative, and on occasion a disputed, form of research study and students embarking upon the practice-based doctorate find themselves in many ways undertaking pioneering work. To date there has been a dearth of empirical studies of the actual experiences of s…Read more
  •  2044
    This article considers a novel approach to researching sporting embodiment via what has been termed ‘autophenomenography’. Whilst having some similarities with autoethnography, autophenomenography provides a distinctive research form, located within phenomenology as theoretical and methodological tradition. Its focus is upon the researcher’s own lived experience of a phenomenon or phenomena. This article examines some of the key elements of a sociological phenomenological approach to studying sp…Read more
  •  227
    Feminist Phenomenology and the Woman in the Running Body
    Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 5 (3): 297-313. 2011.
    Modern phenomenology, with its roots in Husserlian philosophy, has been taken up and utilised in a myriad of ways within different disciplines, but until recently has remained relatively underused within sports studies. A corpus of sociological-phenomenological work is now beginning to develop in this domain, alongside a longer-standing literature in feminist phenomenology. These specific social-phenomenological forms explore the situatedness of lived-body experience within a particular social s…Read more