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A Bourdieusian approach to pain management and health in professional cricket

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posted on 2024-01-09, 09:42 authored by Daniel ReadDaniel Read, Ivan Thomas, Aaron SmithAaron Smith, James Skinner
Painkiller (mis)use in sport presents a range of potential health risks to athletes (e.g., injury exacerbation). There is a lack of qualitative data examining the sociological genesis of variations in attitudes toward painkiller use. Focusing on the concept of physical capital, this article explores how attitudes toward painkiller use among professional cricket players in England are socialized by their workplace. Attitudes toward painkiller (mis)use stem from field-level structures that foster employment vulnerability, ensuring physical capital is precarious and legitimating painkiller (mis)use as a method of protecting economic opportunities with the added benefit of accruing symbolic capital by demonstrating toughness. Based on the findings, this article advocates for a sociologically informed harm-reduction approach to pain management in elite sport.

History

School

  • Loughborough University, London

Published in

Sociology of Sport Journal

Volume

41

Issue

3

Pages

267–276

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© Human Kinetics, Inc.

Publisher statement

Accepted author manuscript version reprinted, by permission, from Sociology of Sport Journal, 2024, 41(3): 267–276 [Journal Title, year, volume (issue): pp-pp, https://doi.org/10.1123/ssj.2023-0042. © Human Kinetics, Inc.

Publication date

2023-12-28

Copyright date

2024

ISSN

0741-1235

eISSN

1543-2785

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Daniel Read. Deposit date: 8 January 2024

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