1st Edition

Young People, Physical Activity and the Everyday

Edited By Jan Wright, Doune Macdonald Copyright 2010
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    Despite society’s current preoccupation with interrelated issues such as obesity, increasingly sedentary lifestyles and children’s health, there has until now been little published research that directly addresses the place and meaning of physical activity in young people’s lives. In this important new collection, leading international scholars address that deficit by exploring the differences in young people’s experiences and meanings of physical activity as these are related to their social, cultural and geographical locations, to their abilities and their social and personal biographies.

    The book places young people’s everyday lives at the centre of the study, arguing that it this 'everydayness' (school, work, friendships, ethnicity, family routines, interests, finances, location) that is key to shaping the engagement of young people in physical activity. By allowing the voices of young people to be heard through these pages, the book helps the reader to make sense of how young people see physical activity in their lives.

    Drawing on a breadth of theoretical frameworks, and challenging the orthodox assumptions that underpin contemporary physical activity policy, interventions and curricula, this book powerfully refutes the argument that young people are 'the problem' and instead demonstrates the complex social constructions of physical activity in the lives of young people. Young People, Physical Activity and the Everyday is essential reading for both students and researchers with a particular interest physical activity, physical education, health, youth work and social policy.

    Introduction: Theorising Youth and Physical Activity  Part 1: Physical Activity and Geographical Locations  1. The Place of Physical Activity in the Lives of Rural Young People: Stories From the ‘Outback’  2.‘The Police be Comin’ so That’s Why I Didn’t go Over There’: Young People’s use of Neighborhood Spaces in a US City  3. Young People, Cities and Physical Activity  Part 2: Social and Cultural Location and Physical Activity  4. Social Class, Schooling and Young People’s Meanings of Physical Activity and Health  5. Physical Activity and Indigenous Young People  6. Physical Activity and Confucianism: the Relations Between Hong Kong Children and Their Parents  7. ‘Our Prophet Said We Should Play Sport’: Young Muslim Women Negotiating Islam, Popular Culture and Physical Activity  Part 3: Physical Activity and Constitution of Selves: Health, Fitness and Bodies  8: Eating Well, Being Active and the Production of the "Good Citizen"  9: Young People, Transitions and Physical Activity  10. ‘Pump Weights, Eat Right’: Young People’s Engagements with Health Discourses  11. ‘Making Castles in the Sand’: Community Contexts and Physical Culture  12. Diversity, Subjectivity and Constructions of Fitness and Health by Young Canadians  Part 4: Methodological Issues and Future Directions  13. Reflections on Methodological Issues and Lessons Learned From the Life Activity Project

    Biography

    Jan Wright is currently Professorial Research Fellow in the Faculty of Education, at the University of Wollongong, Australia.

    Doune Macdonald is Professor (Health and Physical Education) and Head of the School of Human Movement Studies at the University of Queensland, Australia.

    "Young People, Physical Activity and the Everyday offers a relevant and interesting exploration of a variety of youth and physical activity in several developed nations. Undergraduates, post-graduates, practitioners and researchers in areas related to youth physical activity will likely find this resource to be informative and leave them pondering about the conceptualization of youth physical activity. Overall, this is an useful text that brings together a range of perspectives and would be useful as an additional reading in either undergraduate or graduate programmes on leisure, recreation, kinesiology and sociology." – Stephanie Wood, Recreation Therapist / Primary Health Care Coordinator, Capital Health, Halifax, Canada, Published in Annals of Leisure Research