Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 10-15 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
Contemporary ways of understanding human movements, specifically movement learning, are heavily dominated by individualistic, dualistic and mechanistic perspectives. These perspectives are individualistic in the sense that in research as well as in educational practice movements/movers are typically decontextualized, they are dualistic in the sense that the body is taken to be ‘inhabited’, even ‘governed,’ by a rational mind which is not itself a part of that body; and they are mechanistic in the sense that movements and movement learning can be ‘calculated’. This approach has supported the dominance of a westernised and predominantly white, masculinised and heteronormative view of able bodies, embodiment and movements. Hence, it has contributed to marginalise not only other approaches and perspectives and individuals. New research has evolved, including new approaches and these held perspectives have been challenged by social and culturally sensitive, holistic as well as pluralistic, and dynamic/organic perspectives of human movements and moving humans. Examples of such research can be found in disciplines such as; physical education and pedagogy, ethnography, philosophy, and sociology. Learning Movements: New Perspectives of Movement Education provides the societal and epistemological background for these new approaches and will be essential in disseminating this knowledge to movement educators, academics and researchers as well as professionals within education, sports, health and fitness, dance, outdoor activities, etc., and that it will spearhead new and inclusive practices within these settings.
Håkan Larsson is a Professor of sports science, specialisation education at the Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences, Sweden
1. Introduction to New Perspectives of Movement Learning2. Metaphors of Movement Learning3. Movement Learning in Educational Contexts4. Beyond Molecularization: Constructivist, Situated and Activity Theory Approaches to Movement Learning5. A Phenomenological Perspective of Movement Learning6. A Phenomenographic Perspective of Movement Learning7. Foucault’s Poststructuralist Approaches to Understanding Movement Learning8. A Transactional Understanding of Movement Learning9. Practising Movement10. Symbolic Interactionism And Movement Learning11. Teaching and Learning Running Differently: A Phenomenographic Approach to Movement Education12. Movement Learning and Pupils’ Artistic Expression Analysing Situated Artistic Relations in Physical Education13. An Emotional Journey: The Significance of Aesthetic Experience for Motor Learning14. Tangible tricks and transitions in skateboarding15. The Ecstatic Pump and the Logic of Pain. Learning Processes and Embodiment in Fitness Culture16. Conclusion