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Research Article

Lost and found: parkrun, work and identity

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Pages 397-412 | Received 26 Mar 2020, Accepted 27 Apr 2021, Published online: 27 May 2021
 

ABSTRACT

This article develops new understandings of the weekly mass participation running event, parkrun. The popularity of parkrun has been understood in terms of counteracting sedentary lives and obesity and offering mental-health benefits. However, in view of critical accounts of running in general, a more nuanced inquiry was pursued through examining parkrun in the broader context of runners’ lives, particularly their occupations. Managers and professionals formed an exemplifying occupational group. Changes in managers’ and professionals’ work have brought to the fore characteristics of contemporary work more generally such as performativity and insecurity. Data was generated from parkrunners through an artefact prompted conversational method and as the inquiry was insider-research, so the auto-ethnographic influences on the research are critically examined. Visual and narrative findings from parkrunners are presented and interpreted through a social-constructionist identity lens. The distinctive theoretical contribution of this inquiry is to provide a more detailed discussion of identity than is the norm in the field, and to show how running, like work, could structurally regulate identities but how running also offered scope for agentic identity-work. The results show that a desired sense-of-self was unlikely to be derived from occupations whereas parkrun provided an additional identity dimension and enabled the construction of a more positive and satisfying sense-of-self.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Russell Warhurst

Russell Warhurst is Associate Professor in Management at Newcastle Business School in the UK and works as adjunct professor with Aalto University in Finland.  Russell is a management educator who teaches and researches in the areas of Organisational Studies and HRM and D.  His work is advancing understanding of the changing nature of managerial work, managerial identity and managerial learning.  Russell is an occasional parkrunner.

Kate Black

Kate Black is Associate Professor in Management, and Director of Education, at Newcastle Business School, Northumbria University, in the UK.  Kate teaches in the areas of Organisation Studies and HRM/D.  Her research examines professionals' learning and identity.  Kate is an avid parkrunner 

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