TY - JOUR
T1 - What is there to learn from the Open Gym? Developing new pedagogical notions of sports by an empirical engagement with a DIY sports infrastructure
AU - van de Oudeweetering, Karmijn
AU - Vanermen, Lanze
AU - Vandenabeele, Joke
AU - Decuypere, Mathias
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - In this paper, we take an interest in a recently emerged ‘DIY sports infrastructure’ in a Belgian city: the Open Gym. The purpose of our inquiry is to contribute to the literature regarding sports pedagogy by developing theoretical notions, based on empirical engagements, that render how these kinds of sports infrastructures could make up pedagogical places. This inquiry builds on a pedagogical notion of sports as education about, through, and in movement, and deployed theoretical resources of ‘new mobilities’ to direct its focus towards bodily movements. The methodology, informed by the idea of an ‘ethnographic navigation’, involved methods that focused on bodily movements of the researchers and other athletes, and rendered these into descriptive and reflective accounts. These accounts, shown in the findings, present bodily movements as (continuing) attachments, contingencies, and (decentralized) concentrations, resulting from more-or-less solid ties between human bodies and objects, incidental interactions mingling through these ties, and specific ways of coming together by mutual attention. Moreover, the accounts stage the Open Gym as two kinds of places: an interchangeably solid and flowing ‘congealed place’, and a common ground for action that is ‘a platform’. Finally, we introduce the notion of ‘learning to navigate’ to characterize what makes the Open Gym a pedagogical place. Propositions and questions about the empirical and methodological implications of the findings, and what can be learned from the Open Gym, are discussed.
AB - In this paper, we take an interest in a recently emerged ‘DIY sports infrastructure’ in a Belgian city: the Open Gym. The purpose of our inquiry is to contribute to the literature regarding sports pedagogy by developing theoretical notions, based on empirical engagements, that render how these kinds of sports infrastructures could make up pedagogical places. This inquiry builds on a pedagogical notion of sports as education about, through, and in movement, and deployed theoretical resources of ‘new mobilities’ to direct its focus towards bodily movements. The methodology, informed by the idea of an ‘ethnographic navigation’, involved methods that focused on bodily movements of the researchers and other athletes, and rendered these into descriptive and reflective accounts. These accounts, shown in the findings, present bodily movements as (continuing) attachments, contingencies, and (decentralized) concentrations, resulting from more-or-less solid ties between human bodies and objects, incidental interactions mingling through these ties, and specific ways of coming together by mutual attention. Moreover, the accounts stage the Open Gym as two kinds of places: an interchangeably solid and flowing ‘congealed place’, and a common ground for action that is ‘a platform’. Finally, we introduce the notion of ‘learning to navigate’ to characterize what makes the Open Gym a pedagogical place. Propositions and questions about the empirical and methodological implications of the findings, and what can be learned from the Open Gym, are discussed.
KW - attachments
KW - contingencies
KW - ethnographic accounts
KW - navigation
KW - new mobilities
KW - pedagogical places
KW - platforms
KW - Sports infrastructures
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85123415948&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13573322.2022.2027752
DO - 10.1080/13573322.2022.2027752
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85123415948
SN - 1357-3322
VL - 28
SP - 461
EP - 475
JO - Sport, Education and Society
JF - Sport, Education and Society
IS - 4
ER -