Contemporary Meanings of Endurance

Contemporary Meanings of Endurance
Author: Noel B. Salazar
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2022-12-09
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 1000803643

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This book critically analyses the concept of endurance from different theoretical, conceptual, methodological, and empirical perspectives. The first part of the book takes a closer look at endurance, by examining how it relates to concepts such as resilience, perseverance, and perdurance. By analysing how these concepts overlap but differ, we reach a better understanding of what constitutes endurance. Furthermore, endurance is reconfigured as a as a mundane aspect of everyday life. The latter part of the book focuses on embodied experiences of endurance, more specifically on endurance running, walking, and (physical) performances. The different contributions focus on the meanings, values, and attributes that people ascribe to endurance in various socio-cultural contexts. The book uncovers practices, environments, and discourses in which endurance is applied and manifested, from drought-affected communities in rural Australia to professional endurance runners in Ethiopia as well as migrants in Greece and performance acts in domestic spaces in the United Kingdom and beyond. This book will be of interest to scholars of movement sciences, sports studies, mobilities, leisure studies, and resilience studies.

Endurance Running

Endurance Running
Author: William Bridel
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 275
Release: 2015-10-05
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 1317609379

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Running is a fundamental human activity and holds an important place in popular culture. In recent decades it has exploded in popularity as a leisure pursuit, with marathons and endurance challenges exerting a strong fascination. Endurance Running is the first collection of original qualitative research to examine distance running through a socio-cultural lens, with a general objective of understanding the concept and meaning of endurance historically and in contemporary times. Adopting diverse theoretical and methodological approaches to explore topics such as historical conceptualizations of endurance, lived experiences of endurance running, and the meaning of endurance in individual lives, the book reveals how the biological, historical, psychological, and sociological converge to form contextually specific ideas about endurance running and runners. Endurance Running is an essential book for anybody researching across the entire spectrum of endurance sports and fascinating reading for anybody working in the sociology of sport or the body, cultural studies or behavioural science.

Running Events

Running Events
Author: Vassil Girginov
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 139
Release: 2022-12-27
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 1000852709

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This is the first book to critically examine the relationship between running events in local, national and international welfare policy, their marketing and management, and the resulting social impacts. Drawing on original empirical research, the book presents a series of illustrative case studies, with each chapter containing take-home messages for sport and events managers looking to improve their professional practice. Developing a new theoretical perspective on running events, the book presents data from around the world, including five European countries, the US and China. It covers different types of events, from big city marathons to community park runs, and new types of events such as path and trail runs, night runs, ultra runs, extreme runs and obstacle runs, presenting a typology of running events that will help shape the future analysis of this rapidly growing sector. The book also examines the market for running events, runners’ socio-demographic profiles, the main management and marketing approaches and techniques used by organisers, and the socio-economic impacts of running events, such as the effect on people’s attitudes and behaviours, organisational planning, city promotion and social interactions. Running events are central to sport at all levels, from grassroots to professional, so this book is essential reading for any student, researcher or practitioner working in sport management, sport development, sport policy, the sociology of sport or event studies.

The New Australian Military Sociology

The New Australian Military Sociology
Author: Brad West
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2024-08-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1805396315

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Civil-military relations have changed over time with respect to changing demographics, new domestic and international responsibilities, Industry-Defence cooperation, women in the armed forces and contemporary veteran wellbeing.The New Australian Military Sociology aims to provide an antipodean view to theorising civil-military entanglements and uses Australia’s unique geographic, political and cultural context to serve as a case study for other countries.

Science and the Modern World

Science and the Modern World
Author: Alfred North Whitehead
Publisher: Courier Dover Publications
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2024
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0486853500

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One of the most influential thinkers of the twentieth century, philosopher Alfred North Whitehead, presented eight groundbreaking lectures in 1925 and introduced the world to "process philosophy," the examination of the philosophical implications of scientific progress and how they reshaped our perception of the physical world.

Writing in the Vicinity of Art

Writing in the Vicinity of Art
Author: Tracey Warr
Publisher: Meanda Books
Total Pages: 337
Release: 2023-09-29
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1739425707

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Tracey Warr’s art texts have been developed as an ‘embedded’ writer, writing with rather than about artists. Throughout her various modes of art writing, she argues against binaries and focuses on the stream of consciousness, the more than human, and remoteness. Her essays tangle with punk art, art and ecology, endurance art, performance art, site-specific art, and women’s art. Warr’s writing engages with the making processes of contemporary artists, including Marina Abramovic, Ackroyd and Harvey, Tine Bech, Brook and Black, Bruce Gilchrist, Marcus Coates, Elpida Hadzi-Vasileva, London Fieldworks, Hayley Newman, Optik, Alan Smith, Emily Speed, Christian Thompson, James Turrell, Urbonas Studio, and more.

The Contemporary Review

The Contemporary Review
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 940
Release: 1883
Genre: Literature
ISBN:

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Contemporary Review

Contemporary Review
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 934
Release: 1883
Genre:
ISBN:

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Tolerance

Tolerance
Author: Lars Tønder
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 198
Release: 2013-10-07
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0190203234

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In Tolerance, Lars Tønder offers a thought-provoking theory on what tolerance means in pluralistic societies. Tønder begins by showing the limitations of the way democratic theory currently understands tolerance: either as a form of restraint or as benevolence, but always divorced from what it is that the tolerant person really senses. According to Tønder, what is missing from current theories of tolerance is the idea of pain, or the lived experience of what it means to become tolerant. Introducing what he calls a "sensorial orientation to politics" and a "theory of active tolerance," he argues that the act of becoming tolerant (and the reasoning it entails) depends on sensing the world in an expansive manner attentive to the new and unforeseen. In order to illustrate, he engages with a number of theorists, from Seneca, Spinoza, Nietzsche, Merleau-Ponty, and Marcuse to Locke, Kant and Mill, and he draws upon a wide range of examples, including the 2005 controversy over the Danish cartoons of Muhammad, Sacher-Masoch's Venus in Furs, Dave Chappelle's comedy, and methods of torture used in the war on terror. Tolerance is at once a sweeping account of the history of political thought and an invitation to rethink the meaning of tolerance within the sensorial conditions that define twenty first century democratic politics.

Contemporary Novelists

Contemporary Novelists
Author: M. Hutton
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 408
Release: 2012-09-19
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1350309036

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Peter Childs offers accessible analyses of the work of twelve prominent contemporary British writers, including Hanif Kureishi, Pat Barker, Zadie Smith and Jeanette Winterson. This expanded second edition has been revised and updated throughout, and now also features a new chapter on the younger "generation" of novelists born in the 1970s.