Whose Eyes?: Women’s Experiences of Changing in a Public Change Room

Fitness and recreation centres populate today’s modern urban communities and cater to a wide range of people seeking health, fitness and social connection through physical activity. While women’s experiences in these spaces have received some scholarly attention from feminist scholars and scholars o...

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Main Author: Marianne Clark
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2011-12-01
Series:Phenomenology & Practice
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/pandpr/index.php/pandpr/article/view/19845
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spelling doaj-c8fb2182fc1643558f79f180990d71112020-11-25T03:22:09ZengUniversity of AlbertaPhenomenology & Practice1913-47112011-12-0152577210.29173/pandpr1984519845Whose Eyes?: Women’s Experiences of Changing in a Public Change RoomMarianne ClarkFitness and recreation centres populate today’s modern urban communities and cater to a wide range of people seeking health, fitness and social connection through physical activity. While women’s experiences in these spaces have received some scholarly attention from feminist scholars and scholars of the body, little research has explored women’s lived experiences of the change room. In this paper, I argue that everyday spaces such as change rooms and locker rooms are important spaces in which social understandings of the female body manifest. In such spaces, the materiality of the body and the social meanings ascribed to the female body are illuminated and negotiated by those who inhabit and move through them. Using Sartre and Merleau-Ponty as theoretical guides, I discuss how it is for women to see and be seen in a public change room, and how these spaces illuminate the complex relationship women have with their bodies in contemporary society.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/pandpr/index.php/pandpr/article/view/19845
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marianne Clark
spellingShingle Marianne Clark
Whose Eyes?: Women’s Experiences of Changing in a Public Change Room
Phenomenology & Practice
author_facet Marianne Clark
author_sort Marianne Clark
title Whose Eyes?: Women’s Experiences of Changing in a Public Change Room
title_short Whose Eyes?: Women’s Experiences of Changing in a Public Change Room
title_full Whose Eyes?: Women’s Experiences of Changing in a Public Change Room
title_fullStr Whose Eyes?: Women’s Experiences of Changing in a Public Change Room
title_full_unstemmed Whose Eyes?: Women’s Experiences of Changing in a Public Change Room
title_sort whose eyes?: women’s experiences of changing in a public change room
publisher University of Alberta
series Phenomenology & Practice
issn 1913-4711
publishDate 2011-12-01
description Fitness and recreation centres populate today’s modern urban communities and cater to a wide range of people seeking health, fitness and social connection through physical activity. While women’s experiences in these spaces have received some scholarly attention from feminist scholars and scholars of the body, little research has explored women’s lived experiences of the change room. In this paper, I argue that everyday spaces such as change rooms and locker rooms are important spaces in which social understandings of the female body manifest. In such spaces, the materiality of the body and the social meanings ascribed to the female body are illuminated and negotiated by those who inhabit and move through them. Using Sartre and Merleau-Ponty as theoretical guides, I discuss how it is for women to see and be seen in a public change room, and how these spaces illuminate the complex relationship women have with their bodies in contemporary society.
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/pandpr/index.php/pandpr/article/view/19845
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