Fitness vs. Fizkul’tura: Nike and the Unfit Body in Moscow Cover Image

Fitness vs. Fizkul’tura: Nike and the Unfit Body in Moscow
Fitness vs. Fizkul’tura: Nike and the Unfit Body in Moscow

Author(s): Ben Krupp
Subject(s): Business Economy / Management, Health and medicine and law, Sports Studies, Marketing / Advertising
Published by: Центр независимых социологических исследований (ЦНСИ)
Keywords: Fitness; Biopolitics; Health; Sports; Body; Corporation; Nike;

Summary/Abstract: This article examines Nike’s unique marketing in Moscow. Since 2012, Nike has treated Moscow as distinct among its global hubs. It has committed noticeable resources to operating public fitness classes, building public recreational facilities, and sponsoring a state fitness program “Gotov k trudu i oborone” (Ready for labor and defense). In all of these strategies, Nike is pursuing access to the bodies of Russian citizens as its primary objective. I argue that this intimate access to Russian bodies is being sought by Nike in an attempt to disseminate new ways of thinking about the body that open up new risk markets and make the body more available to global capital circuits. But while these new ontologies of the body are meant to erase local and historical ways of understanding, in colonizing Soviet forms of cultural production Nike has inherited many of the socialist relationships between individual health and social well-being. The result is the development of a local way of understanding the body that is an entanglement of socialist past and neoliberal present. This article draws on nine months of ethnographic research in spaces of public recreation in Moscow (gyms, parks, and public schools) conducted between 2016 and 2020.

  • Issue Year: 13/2021
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 81-103
  • Page Count: 23
  • Language: English