Pumping Iron or Pulling Strings: Different Ways of Working Out and Getting Involved in Body-Building
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Review for the Sociology of Sport
- Vol. 20 (4) , 239-261
- https://doi.org/10.1177/101269028502000402
Abstract
This paper features a clear differentiation of three forms of involvement in body-building, as represented by competitive body-builders, non-competitive body-builders, and fitness- oriented weight-trainers. In addition, a distinction between gyms with rather conventional (featuring mostly free weights) and modern, luxury-type equipment (featuring a multitude of exercise machines plus additional facilities) is suggested, thus representing two controversial ways of working out in hody-building. A specifically designed body-image and self-concept questionnaire was administered to regular clients of commercially run gyms. The rather limited ways to work out in conventional gyms seemed to attract a clientele that was more homogeneous with regard to demographic characteristics, but that apparently managed to develop a greater diversity in their body images. The greater variety of working out in luxury gyms seemd to attract a clientele that was more heterogeneous with regard to demographic characteristics, but that apparently tended towards similarity in their body images. Findings are discussed in terms of self-selection and socialization as possible explanations for different patterns of recruitment and forms of involvement in body buildingKeywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Beschreibung einer Lebens-WeltZeitschrift Fur Soziologie, 1985
- Muscle hypertrophy in bodybuildersEuropean Journal of Applied Physiology, 1982
- Effect of a Weight-Training Program on the Self-Concepts of College MalesPerceptual and Motor Skills, 1982
- Muscle ultrastructural characteristics of elite powerlifters and bodybuildersEuropean Journal of Applied Physiology, 1982
- The relationship between the mean muscle fibre area and the muscle cross‐sectional area of the thigh in subjects with large differences in thigh girthActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1981
- Muscular development and lean body weight in body builders and weight liftersMedicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 1980
- Physiologic Characteristics of Elite Body BuildersThe Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1979
- An Empirical Investigation of Self-AttitudesAmerican Sociological Review, 1954
- The appraisal of body-cathexis: body-cathexis and the self.Journal of Consulting Psychology, 1953
- MASCULINE INADEQUACY AND COMPENSATORY DEVELOPMENT OF PHYSIQUEJournal of Personality, 1951