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A Day with the Mountain: Phenomenology, Wonder, and Freeskiing

dc.contributor.authorColeman, John
dc.contributor.supervisorBoudreau, Pierre
dc.contributor.supervisorGraves, Barbara
dc.date.accessioned2012-05-01T16:09:49Z
dc.date.available2012-05-01T16:09:49Z
dc.date.created2012
dc.date.issued2012
dc.degree.disciplineeducation
dc.degree.leveldoctorate
dc.degree.namePhD
dc.description.abstractA Day With The Mountain is an inquiry that ventures into the experience of self-movement through the context of freeskiing. This inquiry focuses on both my experience with three freeskiers; Leah Evans, Josh Dueck, and Mark Abma and my personal experience with freeskiing. The intention behind this inquiry is to challenge, celebrate, and evoke the self-movement experience in order to gain understandings of something so fundamental to human development. This intention is met by asking the main research question; ‘What is the experience of self-movement?’ Self-movement was fleshed out in this inquiry within a phenomenological approach. Phenomenology aims to evoke human experience through descriptive writing, which also proved to be the main challenge of this study. Stories, poetry, and images within a narrative entitled A Day With The Mountain were used to address this challenge and to invite the reader into deeply textured experiences of self-movement. A Day With The Mountain is a day of freeskiing where accumulation, threshold, breakthrough, and release make up the rhythms of the experience; these same rhythms also serve as the chapters of this text. Woven within the evocative writing of the experience of freeskiing are theoretical insights into self-movement, movement itself, of wonder. Emerging from this inquiry are ideas and questions about self-movement and movement that challenge the ground of formal physical education. I sense a potential pedagogical approach that combines movement, self-movement, and wonder as presented in this text. The emerging pedagogical approach focuses on evoking wonder, situates movement as a realm of possibility, and self-movement as possible freedom. The margins of self-movement and movement itself remain beyond the horizon of this text, and those margins are in need of more evocative description. Continuing to inquire into self-movement may reveal new possibilities and expanded understandings of self-movement, which may have significant pedagogical potential.
dc.embargo.termsimmediate
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/22819
dc.identifier.urihttp://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5684
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUniversité d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
dc.subjectself-movement
dc.subjectmovement
dc.subjectwonder
dc.subjectphenomenology
dc.subjectwriting
dc.titleA Day with the Mountain: Phenomenology, Wonder, and Freeskiing
dc.typeThesis
thesis.degree.disciplineeducation
thesis.degree.levelDoctoral
thesis.degree.namePhD

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