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Skill acquisition and Korean landscape architecture: An ethnographic account of skateboarding in Seoul, South Korea

This article sketches a phenomenology of South Korean skateboarding. Drawing on more than 6 years of experience in the region and 20 months of fieldwork, I explore how Seoul-based skaters negotiate their presence in the built environment through precise spatial expertise, minute bodily gestures, and everyday skillful learning. Specifically, I think through the ways in which architectural minutiae within skate parks affect the skaters` perceptual experience of the built environment. Significantly, the architectural typology of the Korean skate parks is experienced as spaces of stillness, closeness, and tranquility, providing a serene and placid alternative to the interpretation of skateboarding as a fundamentally spectacular and trick-driven practice.
© Copyright 2019 Journal of Sport and Social Issues. SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:sport history and sport politics management and organisation of sport technical sports
Published in:Journal of Sport and Social Issues
Language:English
Published: 2019
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/0193723519832460
Volume:43
Issue:5
Pages:368-385
Document types:article
Level:advanced