Roslyn Kerr’s research while affiliated with Abraham Lincoln University and other places

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Publications (1)


From Foucault to Latour: Gymnastics Training as a Socio-Technical Network
  • Article

March 2014

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181 Reads

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36 Citations

Sociology of Sport Journal

Roslyn Kerr

When fourteen-year-old Nadia Comaneci won gold at the 1976 Olympic Games, her youthful appearance inspired concerns about the hard training of young gymnasts. These concerns frequently centered around the coach as a figure of authority with the power to potentially exploit young girls. This paper both confirms and questions this assumption through using an Actor Network Theory (ANT) perspective. It is argued that what has been missing from previous accounts of sports training and competition is the role that nonhumans play. It is shown how existing Foucauldian work examining gymnastics can be extended through demonstrating the Latourian notion that power is enacted through nonhumans. It is further suggested that the inclusion of nonhumans such as video cameras into the gymnastics network can potentially generate different power arrangements from the traditional authoritarian coach/athlete relationship. Latour's concepts of mediators and intermediaries are used to show how nonhumans can have agency and affect gymnastics performance, demonstrating that power is shared among both human and nonhuman actants.

Citations (1)


... Such repetitive skill practice was intended to help a gymnast develop body awareness through automation of movement (performing skills without thought) and perfect execution (Barker-Ruchti, 2008). However, the unintended consequences of this mechanistic approach to movement, such as overuse injuries and hiding or pushing through pain, are normalised early in gymnasts' careers (e.g., Gram et al., 2021;Thomson et al., 2011) and reinforced by a culture that positions the coach as the authority figure who provides constant feedback on skill performance in highly regulated training sessions (e.g., Barker-Ruchti, 2008;Barker-Ruchti & Tinning, 2010;Cavallerio et al., 2016;Jacobs et al., 2017;Kerr, 2014;Oliver et al., 2018). ...

Reference:

Action Research and the Scholar-Coach
From Foucault to Latour: Gymnastics Training as a Socio-Technical Network
  • Citing Article
  • March 2014

Sociology of Sport Journal