Evils of banality in barbell-based group fitness classes: a creative writing-based inquiry through autoethnography and discourse analysis Amelia Walker
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2022
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Walker, A.
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Text (Australia), 2022; 26(Special Issue 67):1-16
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This article approaches group fitness as a textual practice and site for creative writing research analysis. Through autoethnography and discourse analysis of cues from instructor DVDs, I demonstrate how choreographed barbell fitness classes appeal to people uprooted by personal and/or socio-economic upheavals. My treatment of uprootedness connects Hannah Arendt’s writings on twentieth-century totalitarianism with Simone Weil’s account of “the need for roots”. These I read in the context of moral philosopher Elizabeth Minnich’s call to revive Arendtian theory via attention to “the evils of banality”. The resulting reflections position group fitness as a practice that reflects and reinstates cultural attitudes. I also consider how analysis of group fitness can inform understanding of human responses to uprooting situations including2020’s COVID-19 outbreaks and global financial challenges of the early twenty-first century. Observing that group fitness operates together with popular music, team sports, and fashion, I conclude by emphasising the need for ongoing critique of fitness alongside these and other ordinary-seeming aspects of our always-already unprecedented, never-normal lives.
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Copyright 2022 the Author(s)