Drawing on the inspiring work by Wacquant about apprenticeship in boxing, I present data collected during a five-year ethnographic study of a Wushu Kung Fu Association in Italy. This article explores the ways in which this martial art is constructed as a \uc2\uabsocial practice\uc2\ubb, drawing on theories of social practice in order to investigate in depth the relationship between habitus and materials. This relationship seems to be underestimated both in Wacquant's presentation and in most martial arts studies developed from his work. In conclusion, I point out the importance of recognizing the active role of objects in transforming the habitus and briefly discuss the potentiality of enactive ethnography in analyzing social practices
abstract: The global spread of body techniques, such as Yoga, meditation, Tai Chi, Qigong, and non-c...
This thesis examines the martial arts in New Zealand. It takes three approaches. The first is socio-...
The various senses, including the classical five (sight, sound, smell, touch and taste) of Greco-Rom...
Drawing on the inspiring work by Wacquant about apprenticeship in boxing, I present data generated f...
This study explores the concepts of embodied documentation and embodied information practices in the...
This talk will place martial arts practice and studies in the context of an ongoing sea change in th...
Traditionalist Chinese martial arts (TCMAs) are popular in Britain, and some advocates have made ext...
The many and divergent ways in which Fighting Scholars has engaged with the concept of habitus provi...
In this chapter I bring in Norbert Elias's notion of habitus applied to ethnographic settings (the b...
This is the first long-term analysis of the development of Japanese martial arts, connecting ancient...
‘Fighting Scholars’ offers the first book-length overview of the ethnographic study of martial arts ...
The empirical focus of this paper is a martial art, Savate, which has received little scholarly atte...
This study examines Tae Kwon Do practitioner manuals as sites for better understanding the way diver...
Traditionalist Chinese martial arts (TCMAs) are popular in Britain, and some advocates have made ext...
Etude critique et historique de l'évolution des techniques du karaté et de ces fondements idéologiqu...
abstract: The global spread of body techniques, such as Yoga, meditation, Tai Chi, Qigong, and non-c...
This thesis examines the martial arts in New Zealand. It takes three approaches. The first is socio-...
The various senses, including the classical five (sight, sound, smell, touch and taste) of Greco-Rom...
Drawing on the inspiring work by Wacquant about apprenticeship in boxing, I present data generated f...
This study explores the concepts of embodied documentation and embodied information practices in the...
This talk will place martial arts practice and studies in the context of an ongoing sea change in th...
Traditionalist Chinese martial arts (TCMAs) are popular in Britain, and some advocates have made ext...
The many and divergent ways in which Fighting Scholars has engaged with the concept of habitus provi...
In this chapter I bring in Norbert Elias's notion of habitus applied to ethnographic settings (the b...
This is the first long-term analysis of the development of Japanese martial arts, connecting ancient...
‘Fighting Scholars’ offers the first book-length overview of the ethnographic study of martial arts ...
The empirical focus of this paper is a martial art, Savate, which has received little scholarly atte...
This study examines Tae Kwon Do practitioner manuals as sites for better understanding the way diver...
Traditionalist Chinese martial arts (TCMAs) are popular in Britain, and some advocates have made ext...
Etude critique et historique de l'évolution des techniques du karaté et de ces fondements idéologiqu...
abstract: The global spread of body techniques, such as Yoga, meditation, Tai Chi, Qigong, and non-c...
This thesis examines the martial arts in New Zealand. It takes three approaches. The first is socio-...
The various senses, including the classical five (sight, sound, smell, touch and taste) of Greco-Rom...