The Ease of Hard Work: Embodied Neoliberalism among Rocky Mountain Fun Runners

In contemporary Western countries, thin, fit, and “healthy” bodies operate as important markers of social status. This paper draws together Foucauldian and Bourdieusian literatures on this topic to investigate how “embodied neoliberalism” (internalized individualism and self-responsibility) intersec...

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Veröffentlicht in:Qualitative sociology 2019-06, Vol.42 (2), p.251-271
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description In contemporary Western countries, thin, fit, and “healthy” bodies operate as important markers of social status. This paper draws together Foucauldian and Bourdieusian literatures on this topic to investigate how “embodied neoliberalism” (internalized individualism and self-responsibility) intersects with performances of “embodied cultural capital” (high-status markers used to create social distinction). Through an ethnographic case study of upper-middle class white “Fun Runners” in Boulder, Colorado, I ask how people with culturally valued thin, fit bodies enact social status and produce exclusion in an interactional setting. My findings challenge a straightforward translation of “hard work” into status, as we might expect based on neoliberal discourse. Instead, I argue that runners engage in two simultaneous (seemingly paradoxical) forms of boundary work: First, they perform hard work, discipline, and deservingness – drawing boundaries against those who do not engage in the work of bodily discipline; Second, they perform ease and fun – drawing boundaries against those who lack the habitus to make this work appear easy and natural. I contend that the resulting performance of the “ease of hard work” makes the status of thin, fit bodies appear both earned and natural, a doubly effective means of producing exclusion and legitimizing status. These findings reveal that embodied neoliberalism intersects with race and class-based habitus, while also shedding light on how people in privileged positions claim to “deserve” their status through narratives of color-blind meritocracy despite evidence of structural inequalities.
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subjects Bourdieu, Pierre (1930-2002)
Case studies
Cross Cultural Psychology
Cultural capital
Cultural values
Deservingness
Habitus
Individualism
Inequality
Internalization
Meritocracy
Mountains
Multiculturalism & pluralism
Neoliberalism
Occupational status
Personality and Social Psychology
Race
Social Sciences
Social status
Sociology
Translation
Work
title The Ease of Hard Work: Embodied Neoliberalism among Rocky Mountain Fun Runners
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