Body Cultures explores the relationship between the body, sport and landscape. This book presents the first critically edited collection of Henning Eichberg's seven provocative essays into ''body culture''. Eichberg, a well-known scholar in continental Europe who draws upon the ideas of Elias, Focault, Habermas and others, is now attracting considerable interest from sociologists, historians and geographers. This collection has been extensively edited to highlight Eichberg's most important arguments and themes. The editors focus particularly on Eichberg's provocative claims about the notion of space: from the micro-scale of how human bodies ''express'' themselves or are formally ''disciplined'' through their movements in space, to the macro-scale of how bodies and cultures are invented and contested in connection with the self- identities they come to possess in given locations. Introductory essays provide clear explanations and interpretations as well as a biography of Eichberg.
Author(s): John Bale, Chris Philo
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 1998
Language: English
Commentary: 36991
Pages: 166
Front Cover......Page 1
TOC......Page 5
Figures......Page 7
Notes on Contributors......Page 8
Acknowledgements......Page 10
1 - Introduction - Henning Eichberg, space, identity and body culture......Page 11
2 - Thinking Dangerously - The person and his ideas......Page 30
3 - The Enclosure of the Body - The historical relativity of 'health', 'nature' and the environment of sport......Page 53
4 - New Spatial Configurations of Sport? Experiences from Danish alternative planning......Page 74
5 - Sport in Libya - Physical culture as an indicator of societal contradictions......Page 90
6 - Olympic Sport - Neo-colonialism and alternatives......Page 103
7 - Body Culture as Paradigm - The Danish sociology of sport......Page 111
8 - A Revolution of Body Culture? Traditional games on the way from modernisation to 'postmodernity'......Page 128
9 - The Societal Construction of Time and Space as Sociology's Way Home to Philosophy - Sport as paradigm......Page 149
Index......Page 165