'You are just an idiot for not doing any physical activity right now': Pre-service Health and Physical Education teachers' constructions of fatness

Title
'You are just an idiot for not doing any physical activity right now': Pre-service Health and Physical Education teachers' constructions of fatness
Publication Date
2016
Author(s)
Varea, Valeria
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3572-4976
Email: vvarea3@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:vvarea3
Underwood, Mair
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Sage Publications Ltd
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1177/1356336x15617446
UNE publication id
une:19867
Abstract
Research among former Physical Education (PE) school students has demonstrated how fat phobia in PE classes is oppressive and makes it extremely difficult for most students to develop positive subjectivities. This study explores how a group of pre-service Health and Physical Education (HPE) specialist teachers from an Australian university construct fatness discourses. Taking a Foucauldian perspective, focusing particularly on the concepts of surveillance and normalisation, this paper explores the dominant discourses that pre-service HPE specialist teachers construct about fatness. Semi-structured, in-depth interviews (three interviews per participant) were conducted with 14 students (11 females and three males) aged between 18 and 26 at the time of the first interview. The results of a content analysis of the interview data suggest that students generally tend to classify certain bodies as 'decent' and 'normal', implying the existence of 'indecent' and 'abnormal' bodies. Participants also expressed a paternalistic approach and moral judgments towards people they considered to be fat. The results suggest that HPE specialist teachers have certain constructions of fatness that could be explored in their undergraduate degrees so as to minimise any possible ramifications for their teaching.
Link
Citation
European Physical Education Review, 22(4), p. 465-478
ISSN
1741-2749
1356-336X
Start page
465
End page
478

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