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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp016m311r64n
Title: Getting Centered: An Ethnography of Yoga Culture
Authors: Kruk, Allison
Advisors: Duneier, Mitchell
Department: Sociology
Class Year: 2015
Abstract: Why has yoga become popular in America, and what are the implications of that popularity, given yoga’s status as a cultural transplant from India? This thesis uses participant observation, interviewing, and embodied practice to examine this question. I argue that yoga represents technological equipment for living, capable of aiding participants with emotional trauma and quotidian difficulties. I argue that yoga is a limit experience in that it encourages participants to transgress normative boundaries to reconstitute subjectivity against the bureaucratic rationalism of modernity. This thesis situates these rationalities for practicing yoga amidst a local spatiality that reflects yogic philosophy even outside the studio. It also situates these rationalities alongside a neoliberalist consumerism that implicates females in a particularly gendered form of symbolic violence and complicates the boundary between material and spiritual practice. The thesis concluded by considering yoga’s politics and the cultural importation of health and wellness resources more generally.
Extent: 131 pages
URI: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp016m311r64n
Type of Material: Princeton University Senior Theses
Language: en_US
Appears in Collections:Sociology, 1954-2020

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