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Surveillance as a technique of power in physical education
61
Citations
42
References
2004
Year
Women EmpowermentPhysical ActivityEducationMale GazeFeminist InquirySocial SciencesTeacher EducationGender IdentityFeminist ResearchEmbodied NatureGender StudiesPhysical EducationFeminist KnowledgeSport ScienceFeminist ScholarshipIntersectionalityFeminist PerspectiveFeminist ScienceFeminist TheoryFeminist MethodologiesFeminist PhilosophySociologySocial Foundations Of EducationHuman MovementFeminist Method
This paper analyses surveillance as a technique of power in the culture of physical education, including its impact upon the health of teachers. Additionally, gendered aspects of surveillance are investigated because physical education is an important location in and through which bodies are inscribed with gendered identities. The embodied nature of physical educators' work renders the body as particularly significant in patterns of privilege and domination. The research was guided by Michel Foucault's work and poststructural feminist perspectives on the importance of power in social life. At nine schools across two international research sites, the functioning of surveillance was evidenced through the multi‐directional workings of power in top–down, lateral, and bottom–up configurations. Data indicated that surveillance occurred on, through and about bodies. It had a strong gender dimension as the male gaze inscribed both female teachers' and students' bodies with value and competence. In terms of teachers' health, as well as responses to surveillance on a physical and emotional level, the workings of power were also influential in shaping teachers' identities.
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