This book adopts an innovative approach in exploring the evolution of fitness practices among a community of gym goers amid a global pandemic considering its impact on the interplay of the words habits and relationships gym goers use in realizing their aspirations of wellness and well-being. Perrino and Reno introduce a multilayered framework which combines insights from linguistic and sociocultural anthropology integrating narrative analysis discourse analysis and ethnography with autoethnography. This approach allows for a holistic portrait of the gym as a research site and of fitness as a fruitful area for dynamic cross-disciplinary study. The volume explores how the COVID-19 pandemic has shaped attitudes and practices around fitness drawing on audio and video recordings and the authors’ lived experiences to analyze everything from workout choreography to micro-celebrity fitness culture to group classes. The book raises key questions around what it means to be well amid a pandemic the practical dangers of realizing fitness goals in such times the effects on the social relationships inherent to gym culture and the impact on identity construction and self-reflection. This volume will appeal to scholars interested in the interdisciplinary study of fitness in such areas as linguistic anthropology sociocultural anthropology health humanities and sport studies. |Pandemic Health and Fitness | Linguistics