The Fitness Campaign in Austria in the early 1970s - A Case Study in the Transformative Process to Postmodern Sports in Central European Societies

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Die Fitness Saison in Österreich in den frühen 1970er - eine Fallstudie zu dem Transformationsprozess des Postmodernen Sports in zentral europäischen Gesellschaften
Leiter des Projekts:Müllner, Rudolf (Universität Wien / Institut für Sportwissenschaft, Tel.: 0043 427748830, rudolf.muellner at univie.ac.at)
Forschungseinrichtung:Universität Wien / Institut für Sportwissenschaft
Finanzierung:Eigenfinanzierung
Format: Projekt (SPOFOR)
Sprache:Englisch
Projektlaufzeit:01/2014 - 12/2015
Schlagworte:
Erfassungsnummer:PR020150400091
Quelle:Jahreserhebung

Ziel

Vorhabensziel: Dekonstruktion der organisatorischen, ideologischen und körperhistorischen Transformationsprozesse in der modernen Fitnessbewegung Österreichs
Geplante Ergebnisverwertung: Präsentation ISHPES-Kongress in Doha, 2014. Präsentation NASSH-Kongress in Miami, 2015

On 26th October 1971 the first national so called “Fit-walk and fit run” took place in Austria. It was the biggest mass sport event in the history of the country. Around 150.000 people participated. Still today the national Fit run and walk on the most important Austrian state holiday – commemorating the declaration of the Austrian Independence in the year 1955 – talks place.
This paper aims to examine the history, organization, financing, ideals and goals of the so called “Fit-mach-mit- Campaign” in Austria in the early 1970s.
The study focuses not only on the organizational history of the early Austrian fitness movement but also asks how and if the fitness movement can be examined more generally under the theoretical framework of fordist and postfordist sports in central European societies. That means to identify the key characteristics of modern and postmodern sports and to ask what role this campaign played in that transformative process. The thesis is, that this fitness campaign as a clearly to define phenomenon bears already some key elements of postmodern sports concerning especially the number and type (age, gender) of participants /agents, the forms an type of organization, the contents and goals, the body concepts or the changing relation between body subjects and state intervention. On the other hand it can be shown that the “Fit-mach-mit-campaign” still beard important elements of the fordist sports ideology. As a theoretical frame we use the theory of functional differentiation and modernization as well as the social-historical concepts of Fordism and Postfordism.