Biopolitics and the repressive hypothesis of the body: the case of swimming training in Finland
Engelsk titel: Biopolitics and the repressive hypothesis of the body: the case of swimming training in Finland
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Författare:
Vaahtera, Elina
Email: elina.vaahtera@helsinki.fi
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 42
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 16053832
Personnamn som ämnesord:
Young, Iris Marion
Sammanfattning
ris Marion Young, a feminist theoretician, argued that patriarchal society inhibits women to
cultivate capable bodies. In contrast, Foucauldian arguments have stressed that to view a certain
historical situation as a consequence of repression, overlooks how the idea of repression is already
a product of power. This article explores this nexus between Foucault and Young, and investigates
how bio/thanatopolitical projects saturate the notion of the repressed body. The article investigates
how the inability to swim has been connected with inhibition in Finland in the twentieth and early
twenty-first century. It argues that the repressive hypothesis of the body generates the identification
with able-bodiedness in the ways in which eventually favour athletic or otherwise capable bodies.
Moreover, the assumption that incapability is an inhibited way of being makes able-bodiedness
appear to be primary and original. Thus, the exploration of the repressive hypothesis helps us to
understand the intricate mechanisms of ableism.