Emotional aspects of physical (in)activity throughout women’s lifecourse

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

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Emotional aspects of physical (in)activity throughout women’s lifecourse. / Hybholt, Maria.

2022. Abstract fra EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport, Tubingen, Tyskland.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

Harvard

Hybholt, M 2022, 'Emotional aspects of physical (in)activity throughout women’s lifecourse', EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport, Tubingen, Tyskland, 07/06/2022 - 10/06/2022. <https://indico3.conference4me.psnc.pl/event/12/contributions/2098/>

APA

Hybholt, M. (2022). Emotional aspects of physical (in)activity throughout women’s lifecourse. Abstract fra EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport, Tubingen, Tyskland. https://indico3.conference4me.psnc.pl/event/12/contributions/2098/

Vancouver

Hybholt M. Emotional aspects of physical (in)activity throughout women’s lifecourse. 2022. Abstract fra EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport, Tubingen, Tyskland.

Author

Hybholt, Maria. / Emotional aspects of physical (in)activity throughout women’s lifecourse. Abstract fra EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport, Tubingen, Tyskland.

Bibtex

@conference{d8dbf373f0f3488d90defc09c14011ec,
title = "Emotional aspects of physical (in)activity throughout women{\textquoteright}s lifecourse",
abstract = "In the social acceleration of modernity, the super woman ideology involves professional, familial, and leisurely obligations producing time pressure among women throughout life. Not being able to meet the obligations, such as leisure-based physical activity, generates emotional consequences which require management. Inspired by the microsociological perspective of Arlie Hochschild (1983; 1997) the present study explores emotional consequences and emotion management related to being physically active or inactive throughout life. The study comprised 25 in-depth semi-structured individual interviews with Danish women (57-71 years) who have been either physically active (N=13) or physically inactive (N=12) during the last 20 years. Results suggest that the physically active women experience exercise as a meaningful activity that helps them manage the emotional consequences of their rushed everyday lives. For example, by creating a liberating space, by involving calming natural spaces, or by enabling a space for unintentional embodied cognition. Notably, women did not express health benefits as a principal motivation for participation. Conversely, the physically inactive women understood exercise as something that should be done because of the health benefits. Due to familial and professional obligations, however, they did not participate in exercise regularly, leading to feelings of shame. Being physically inactive became an emotional burden that had to be managed to create an appropriate publicly facial and bodily display. When health benefits functions as a stigmatizing social obligation among physically inactive women and not as reasons for life-long exercising, it seems highly relevant to discuss the purpose of the health-promoting focus on physical activity.",
author = "Maria Hybholt",
year = "2022",
language = "English",
note = "EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport : The role of sport sociology in interdisciplinary research, EASS/ISSA 2022 ; Conference date: 07-06-2022 Through 10-06-2022",
url = "https://issaeass2022.com/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Emotional aspects of physical (in)activity throughout women’s lifecourse

AU - Hybholt, Maria

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - In the social acceleration of modernity, the super woman ideology involves professional, familial, and leisurely obligations producing time pressure among women throughout life. Not being able to meet the obligations, such as leisure-based physical activity, generates emotional consequences which require management. Inspired by the microsociological perspective of Arlie Hochschild (1983; 1997) the present study explores emotional consequences and emotion management related to being physically active or inactive throughout life. The study comprised 25 in-depth semi-structured individual interviews with Danish women (57-71 years) who have been either physically active (N=13) or physically inactive (N=12) during the last 20 years. Results suggest that the physically active women experience exercise as a meaningful activity that helps them manage the emotional consequences of their rushed everyday lives. For example, by creating a liberating space, by involving calming natural spaces, or by enabling a space for unintentional embodied cognition. Notably, women did not express health benefits as a principal motivation for participation. Conversely, the physically inactive women understood exercise as something that should be done because of the health benefits. Due to familial and professional obligations, however, they did not participate in exercise regularly, leading to feelings of shame. Being physically inactive became an emotional burden that had to be managed to create an appropriate publicly facial and bodily display. When health benefits functions as a stigmatizing social obligation among physically inactive women and not as reasons for life-long exercising, it seems highly relevant to discuss the purpose of the health-promoting focus on physical activity.

AB - In the social acceleration of modernity, the super woman ideology involves professional, familial, and leisurely obligations producing time pressure among women throughout life. Not being able to meet the obligations, such as leisure-based physical activity, generates emotional consequences which require management. Inspired by the microsociological perspective of Arlie Hochschild (1983; 1997) the present study explores emotional consequences and emotion management related to being physically active or inactive throughout life. The study comprised 25 in-depth semi-structured individual interviews with Danish women (57-71 years) who have been either physically active (N=13) or physically inactive (N=12) during the last 20 years. Results suggest that the physically active women experience exercise as a meaningful activity that helps them manage the emotional consequences of their rushed everyday lives. For example, by creating a liberating space, by involving calming natural spaces, or by enabling a space for unintentional embodied cognition. Notably, women did not express health benefits as a principal motivation for participation. Conversely, the physically inactive women understood exercise as something that should be done because of the health benefits. Due to familial and professional obligations, however, they did not participate in exercise regularly, leading to feelings of shame. Being physically inactive became an emotional burden that had to be managed to create an appropriate publicly facial and bodily display. When health benefits functions as a stigmatizing social obligation among physically inactive women and not as reasons for life-long exercising, it seems highly relevant to discuss the purpose of the health-promoting focus on physical activity.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

T2 - EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport

Y2 - 7 June 2022 through 10 June 2022

ER -

ID: 355666510