Barcelona runner: turismo, ciudad y cuerpos posthumanos

In this article I present acritical reading of urban running in Barcelona based on mobile ethnographic fieldwork carried out during 2015-2018. Through the analysis of specific tourist expressions of running narrated and lived by recreational runners and political actors. I explain how runners ́ bod...

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Main Author: Elisa Herrera Altamirano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SHARE Press 2019-07-01
Series:Eracle
Online Access:http://www.camerablu.unina.it/index.php/eracle/article/view/6197
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spelling doaj-98db3e1c5df9456187ab7311846dbdb12021-03-22T08:47:30ZengSHARE PressEracle2611-66932019-07-012110.6093/2611-6693/6197Barcelona runner: turismo, ciudad y cuerpos posthumanosElisa Herrera Altamirano In this article I present acritical reading of urban running in Barcelona based on mobile ethnographic fieldwork carried out during 2015-2018. Through the analysis of specific tourist expressions of running narrated and lived by recreational runners and political actors. I explain how runners ́ bodies relate and perform constantly with the urban context to become more-than-human materialities. The exploration of touristic everyday life running practices, the design of the marathon route in Barcelona and the running tours in the city reveal how runners ́ embodied experiences of pain and pleasure, feelings of belonging, solidarity, celebration and imagination of the future emerge in continuity with the urban context. Following this, we can acknowledge how contemporary sport tourism trends vehicle complex forms of embodied subjectivity. Hence, I encourage a reading of the body in its ‘relational’ sense, emplaced (Howes, 2005; Pink, 2011) and in intra-action (Barad, 2007) with diverse human and non-human materialities. In addition, I propose the figuration ‘body-citycontinuum’ as an analytical tool that contribute to the purpose of broadening our understanding of corporality and to foster the creation of new economies of representation of the body in social sciences from a posthumanist standpoint. http://www.camerablu.unina.it/index.php/eracle/article/view/6197
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elisa Herrera Altamirano
spellingShingle Elisa Herrera Altamirano
Barcelona runner: turismo, ciudad y cuerpos posthumanos
Eracle
author_facet Elisa Herrera Altamirano
author_sort Elisa Herrera Altamirano
title Barcelona runner: turismo, ciudad y cuerpos posthumanos
title_short Barcelona runner: turismo, ciudad y cuerpos posthumanos
title_full Barcelona runner: turismo, ciudad y cuerpos posthumanos
title_fullStr Barcelona runner: turismo, ciudad y cuerpos posthumanos
title_full_unstemmed Barcelona runner: turismo, ciudad y cuerpos posthumanos
title_sort barcelona runner: turismo, ciudad y cuerpos posthumanos
publisher SHARE Press
series Eracle
issn 2611-6693
publishDate 2019-07-01
description In this article I present acritical reading of urban running in Barcelona based on mobile ethnographic fieldwork carried out during 2015-2018. Through the analysis of specific tourist expressions of running narrated and lived by recreational runners and political actors. I explain how runners ́ bodies relate and perform constantly with the urban context to become more-than-human materialities. The exploration of touristic everyday life running practices, the design of the marathon route in Barcelona and the running tours in the city reveal how runners ́ embodied experiences of pain and pleasure, feelings of belonging, solidarity, celebration and imagination of the future emerge in continuity with the urban context. Following this, we can acknowledge how contemporary sport tourism trends vehicle complex forms of embodied subjectivity. Hence, I encourage a reading of the body in its ‘relational’ sense, emplaced (Howes, 2005; Pink, 2011) and in intra-action (Barad, 2007) with diverse human and non-human materialities. In addition, I propose the figuration ‘body-citycontinuum’ as an analytical tool that contribute to the purpose of broadening our understanding of corporality and to foster the creation of new economies of representation of the body in social sciences from a posthumanist standpoint.
url http://www.camerablu.unina.it/index.php/eracle/article/view/6197
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