Physical Cultural Studies (pcs@bath)
What is PCS?

Our research is concerned with: Sport, Power, Physicality, Culture, Policy, Pedagogy, Corporeality, Health, Technology, Humanism
“Embodiment is never neutral.”
— Hargreaves and Vertinsky
(2007, p. 10)
Physical Cultural Studies (PCS) advances the critically and theoretically-driven analysis of physical culture, in all its myriad forms. These include sport, exercise, health, dance, and movement related practices, which PCS research locates and analyses within the broader social, political, economic, and technological contexts in which they are situated.
More specifically, PCS is dedicated to the contextually based understanding of the corporeal practices, pedagogies, discourses, and subjectivities through which active bodies become organised, represented, and experienced in relation to the operations of social power. PCS thus identifies the role played by physical culture in reproducing, and sometimes challenging, particular class, ethnic, gender, ability, generational, national, racial, and/or sexual norms and differences.
Through the development and strategic dissemination of potentially empowering forms of knowledge and understanding, PCS at Bath seeks to illuminate, and intervene into, sites of physical cultural injustice and inequity. Furthermore, since physical culture is both manifest and experienced in different forms, PCS adopts a multimethod approach toward engaging the empirical (including ethnography and autoethnography, participant observation, discourse and media analysis, and contextual analysis). Dissemination of this research is supported through various forms of public engagement in many different areas including performance art, creative workshops, discussion, multimedia, exhibitions, seminar/conferences, journals, books and other written forms.
PCS advances an equally fluid theoretical vocabulary, utilising concepts and theories from a variety of disciplines (including cultural studies, education, economics, history, media studies, performance studies, philosophy, sociology, and urban studies) in engaging and interpreting the particular aspect of physical culture under scrutiny.
Our aim
Following, and in the spirit of Shilling (2003[1993]), our aim is to:
Develop a more adequate–empirically grounded; theoretically informed; politically incisive; and, methodologically rigorous–approach towards conceptualising the active body and its position within, and relationship to, broader society.
Research programmes
We are always keen to talk to interested graduate students who are interested in conducting some research at MRes or PhD level.
Research activity
Our activities are grouped with the following, inter-related and overlapping, areas:
- Culture, Body, Physicality
- Policy, Power & Practice
- Technology, Culture & Public Bio-Pedagogies
- Innovative Research Practices
People
Academic Staff
- Anthony Bush
- Sam Carr
- Laura De Pian
- Jess Francombe-Webb
- Andrew Manley
- Brad Millington
- Emma Rich
- Jill Porter
- Michael Silk (Head of Group)
Postgraduate Students
- Adi Adams (PhD)
- Simon Browning (EdD, supervised by Jill Porter / Eva Vass)
- Nicola De Martini Ugolotti (PhD, Supervised by: Michael Silk / Ceri Brown)
- Rob Elchuk (PhD, Supervised by: Jill Porter / Anthony Bush)
- Will Finlayson (PhD, Supervised by: Anthony Bush / Michael Silk)
- Liz Molten (EdD, Supervised by: Michael Silk / Emma Rich)
- Amanda Pavey (PhD)
- Rachel Ravid (EdD, supervised by Jill Porter / Seth Chaiklin)
- Will Roberts (PhD, Supervised by: Anthony Bush / Michael Silk)
- Ben Rockett (PhD, Supervised by: Sam Carr)
- Emma Seal (PhD, Supervised by: Jill Porter / Emma Rich)
- Andrew Hibbert (EdD)
- Haydn Morgan (EdD)
- Shaun Williams (EdD)
