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    Sport, Mental Illness and Sociology

    £71.09
    £78.99
    Price-Match is available in-store for recommended titles in CCCU module handbooks
    ISBN: 9781787434707
    Products specifications
    Attribute nameAttribute value
    AuthorAtkinson, Michael
    Pub Date14/12/2018
    BindingHardback
    Pages208
    Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
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    This book approaches the study of mental illness in sport cultures from a variety of social scientific perspectives. Contributions focus on the multiple manifestations of mental illness within sport cultures, and the degree to which sport may be utilized as a means of helping people who struggle with mental illness.

    At a time
    when the public discussion of mental illness in society is reaching a high
    point, athletes and other sports insiders remain curiously silent about their
    private battles with a range of mental illnesses. While a series of
    professional athletes have exposed the deep, dark secret related to the
    pervasiveness of mental illness in high performance sport, relatively little is
    known, sociologically, about what mental illness culturally means inside sport.


    This edited
    collection showcases research on how sport, as a social institution, may
    actually produce dangerous cultural practices and contexts that foster the
    development of mental illness within athlete groups. Further, chapters also
    illustrate how sport, when organized with sensitivity and care, may serve to
    help manage mental illnesses. Rather than analyzing mental illness as an
    individual phenomenon, contributors to this volume equally attest to how mental
    illness is socially developed, constructed, managed, and culturally understood
    within sport settings. The book highlights the relevance of a range of theories
    pertinent to the social study of mental illness including dramaturgy, cultural
    studies, learning theory, symbolic interaction, existentialism, and total pain
    theory. Chapters range from the discussion of depression, anxiety, eating
    disorders, drug addiction, epilepsy, mental trauma, stigma, the mass mediation
    of mental illness, and the promise of sport as a vehicle for personal and
    collective recovery.