Presences and perspectives: investigating the role of physical activity and sport in the lives of three Indo-Canadian women

The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the role of physical activity in the lives of three Indian women living in Canada, specifically in the Lower Mainland, and to examine some of the more prominent issues they are facing in today's physical activity context by giving voice to their e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Naidu, Paromita
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8186
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-8186
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-81862014-03-14T15:42:34Z Presences and perspectives: investigating the role of physical activity and sport in the lives of three Indo-Canadian women Naidu, Paromita Physical fitness for women -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Social aspects Sports for women -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Case studies East Indian Canadian women -- British Columbia -- Vancouver The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the role of physical activity in the lives of three Indian women living in Canada, specifically in the Lower Mainland, and to examine some of the more prominent issues they are facing in today's physical activity context by giving voice to their experiences and stories. This is a vital area to investigate because of the tendency to universalize and stereotype Indo-Canadian women without properly understanding their cultural backgrounds and the content and context of their physical activity experiences. I wish to understand what has motivated Indo-Canadian women to get involved with and continue with physical activity pursuits; and to what degree have social support structures (family, school, community, peers) influenced their decisions. Women in this particular age bracket (25-35) will hopefully be able to articulate not only their sporting experiences, but also their opportunities, constraints, dissatisfactions and accomplishments as they relate to physical activity. Social support structures such as family, community and school, physicality and the body, leadership and mentoring and self-promotion and marketing are some of the more prominent themes. The methodology chosen to extract the data is that of life story interviews. A series of in-depth interviews conducted with each of the individual participants reveals their own unique, complex and selective life and physical activity experiences. Each woman seemed to view, and construct the issue of participation in physical activity as a personal responsibility for community development. For example, one woman struggled to create and find support for an all-Indian dragon boat team and define a space for Indian women, while another desired to promote alternatives and encourage women to dance and maintain culture at a community level. The third participant's goals included increasing the participation rates of younger Indian women, by providing positive leadership. The participants are teaching Indian women and girls to un-learn an exclusion of self. Solutions proposed and implemented by them included: female-only environments, minimal or no-cost sessions, training and employing South Asians, daycare, accommodation of religious calendar, transportation, education in community and family, choice of attire, use of ethnic language, and redefinition of common images. 2009-05-26T16:33:43Z 2009-05-26T16:33:43Z 1998 2009-05-26T16:33:43Z 1998-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8186 eng UBC Retrospective Theses Digitization Project [http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/retro_theses/]
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Physical fitness for women -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Social aspects
Sports for women -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Case studies
East Indian Canadian women -- British Columbia -- Vancouver
spellingShingle Physical fitness for women -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Social aspects
Sports for women -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Case studies
East Indian Canadian women -- British Columbia -- Vancouver
Naidu, Paromita
Presences and perspectives: investigating the role of physical activity and sport in the lives of three Indo-Canadian women
description The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the role of physical activity in the lives of three Indian women living in Canada, specifically in the Lower Mainland, and to examine some of the more prominent issues they are facing in today's physical activity context by giving voice to their experiences and stories. This is a vital area to investigate because of the tendency to universalize and stereotype Indo-Canadian women without properly understanding their cultural backgrounds and the content and context of their physical activity experiences. I wish to understand what has motivated Indo-Canadian women to get involved with and continue with physical activity pursuits; and to what degree have social support structures (family, school, community, peers) influenced their decisions. Women in this particular age bracket (25-35) will hopefully be able to articulate not only their sporting experiences, but also their opportunities, constraints, dissatisfactions and accomplishments as they relate to physical activity. Social support structures such as family, community and school, physicality and the body, leadership and mentoring and self-promotion and marketing are some of the more prominent themes. The methodology chosen to extract the data is that of life story interviews. A series of in-depth interviews conducted with each of the individual participants reveals their own unique, complex and selective life and physical activity experiences. Each woman seemed to view, and construct the issue of participation in physical activity as a personal responsibility for community development. For example, one woman struggled to create and find support for an all-Indian dragon boat team and define a space for Indian women, while another desired to promote alternatives and encourage women to dance and maintain culture at a community level. The third participant's goals included increasing the participation rates of younger Indian women, by providing positive leadership. The participants are teaching Indian women and girls to un-learn an exclusion of self. Solutions proposed and implemented by them included: female-only environments, minimal or no-cost sessions, training and employing South Asians, daycare, accommodation of religious calendar, transportation, education in community and family, choice of attire, use of ethnic language, and redefinition of common images.
author Naidu, Paromita
author_facet Naidu, Paromita
author_sort Naidu, Paromita
title Presences and perspectives: investigating the role of physical activity and sport in the lives of three Indo-Canadian women
title_short Presences and perspectives: investigating the role of physical activity and sport in the lives of three Indo-Canadian women
title_full Presences and perspectives: investigating the role of physical activity and sport in the lives of three Indo-Canadian women
title_fullStr Presences and perspectives: investigating the role of physical activity and sport in the lives of three Indo-Canadian women
title_full_unstemmed Presences and perspectives: investigating the role of physical activity and sport in the lives of three Indo-Canadian women
title_sort presences and perspectives: investigating the role of physical activity and sport in the lives of three indo-canadian women
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8186
work_keys_str_mv AT naiduparomita presencesandperspectivesinvestigatingtheroleofphysicalactivityandsportinthelivesofthreeindocanadianwomen
_version_ 1716651336005582848