Students’ health engagement and affective relations in Danish upper secondary school

Kathrine Vitus

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

To increase our understanding of the dynamics of young people’s embodied engagement in health, this article analyses Danish upper secondary school students’ understandings and practices of health and the role of the school environment in these dynamics. Participatory, visual and narrative data were collected during fieldwork with 37 students aged 16–17. Deleuze and Guattari’s philosophy of the body is applied to analyse the affective relations and emerging body-health assemblages within the students’ school life, which generated force and vitality (here conceptualised as health). Through becoming within sensuous, social and political body-health assemblages, the students attempted to curb school stress, sustain social belonging in an individualistic school environment and both reproduce affirming power discourses and subvert their territorialisation. The study proposes an analytical shift in perspective on young people’s health away from an individualistic ‘components approach’ towards a relational understanding, and suggests that students’ health at school relates to collectivity, quality, rhythm and co-produced engagement, rather than individuality, quantity, rules and performance, which increasingly characterise Danish health discourse and school policy.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Youth Studies
Volume21
Issue number9
Pages (from-to)1250-1266
Number of pages17
ISSN1367-6261
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Keywords

  • Body-health assemblages
  • Deleuze and Guattari
  • becoming
  • school environment
  • visual and narrative methods

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