Chapter
Chapter 2. Practice as a shared accomplishment: Intercorporeal attunement in acrobatics
2. Methodological considerations
3. Empirical example: A training episode
Sequence one – preparatory exercise: Flexible stability
Sequence two – preparatory exercise: Finding a common rhythm
Sequence three – the intervening of the trainer
Sequence four – the retreat to an earlier qualification stage
Sequences five to seven – the gradual development of self-organization abilities
Sequences eight and nine – the performative recognition of the shared performance
Conclusion: Training and intercorporealization
Chapter 3. Intercorporeality and interkinesthetic gestalts in handball
Kinesthetic and interkinesthetic gestalts
Intercorporeality and interkinesthetic gestalts in handball
A typical kinesthetic gestalt in handball
The interkinesthetic gestalt of a handball move
The production of intercorporeality and interkinesthesia in a handball team
Upholding interkinesthetic gestalts
The failed accomplishment of an interkinesthetic gestalt
An antagonistic interkinesthetic gestalt
Chapter 4. Visual and motor components of action anticipation in basketball and soccer
Action prediction in sport
Predicting fooling actions
Functional role of motor and visual areas in action prediction
Chapter 5. Constructing cooperative and antagonistic intercorporeality: Rugby referee talk and action on the field
Intercorporeal enaction and the culture of playing professional rugby union
Chapter 6. Rock climbers’ communicative and sensory practices: Routine intercorporeality between climbers, rock, and auxiliary technologies
1. Rock climbing: An introduction
2. Rock climbing as intercorporeal practice
3. An ethnomethodological approach to rock climbing and intercorporeality
4. Intercorporeal enaction: The lived work of climbing
4.1 Example 1: Intercopreal enaction in collaborative assessments
4.2 Example 2: Intercorporeal enaction in collaborative climbing
4.3 Example 3: Intercorporeal enaction with auxiliary technologies
Chapter 7. Intercorporeal enaction and synchrony: The case of distance running together
Sociological phenomenology
The collaborative autoethnographic running project
Concluding comments – intuition or attunement?
Chapter 8. Sound joined actions in rowing and swimming
The method of movement sonification
Mechanisms of multisensory integration
Movement sonification and sports
Modifying and optimizing sensorimotor control
Activation of the action-observation-system and the motor loop during the observation of a kinematic sonification
Retrieval of movement representations
Discrimination of rowing patterns
Coordinating movements with sonified movements of another person
Modification of team performance
Chapter 9. “It’s really strange when nobody is watching”: Enactive intercorporeality and the Spielraum of practices in freeskiing
Bodily attention and the legitimacy of interruptions
Publicly visible caring about tricks
The funpark as a visual arena
The visibility of embodied vision: Position and posture
The need for teleo-affectivity
Enacting intercorporeal practices
Chapter 10. Teaching bodies: Visual and haptic communication in martial arts
Learning martial arts as an ethnographer
Teaching by doing – visual communication in martial arts classes
Chapter 11. Intercorporeal (re)enaction: Instructional correction in basketball practice
Ethnomethodology, conversation analysis and instruction in physical activities
Demonstrations and reenactments in instructional corrections of physical activities
Orienting to an instructional activity
Orienting to an instructional activity as a correction of the prior drill performance
Building an intercorporeal perceptual environment for reenactments
Projecting reenactments into the constructed activity space
The intercorporeal accomplishment of correction contrast Pairs
Transcription conventions
Chapter 12. Ways of relating: Involvements of bodies in ballet class
2. Enacting ballet bodies
3. The setting of ballet class
Chapter 13. Intercorporeal with imaginary bodies: The case of trampoline and boxing training
Imagination as part of the intercorporeal continuum
Using imagined objects and imaginary pain in trampoline training
The substitution of non-haptic and physical impressions in boxing training