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Article
Tailoring nirvana: Appropriating yoga, resignification and instructional challenges
International Journal of Media & Cultural Politics (2016)
  • Mary Grace Antony, Western Washington University
Abstract
As an appropriated cultural artefact, yoga provides the opportunity to examine how resignification alters instructional goals and outcomes. This project critically examines instructional challenges experienced by non-Indian yoga teachers, with an emphasis on how resolving these issues impacts pedagogical relationships. Findings demonstrate that student preferences require instructors to resignify yoga instruction within three areas: replacing Sanskrit nomenclature with more relatable terminology; highlighting the physiological (rather than religio-spiritual) benefits; and varying asana routines to discourage boredom. Together, these themes overlap and reinforce one another to ideologically rearticulate yoga as fitness and physical therapy, and thus discursively shift the focus of yoga practice from text/artefact (yoga) to consumer (student).
Keywords
  • yoga,
  • cultural appropriation,
  • resignification,
  • pedagogy,
  • instructional discourse,
  • spirituality
Publication Date
September, 2016
DOI
DOI: 10.1386/macp.12.3.283_1
Publisher Statement
Published by Intellect
Citation Information
Mary Grace Antony. "Tailoring nirvana: Appropriating yoga, resignification and instructional challenges" International Journal of Media & Cultural Politics Vol. 12 Iss. 3 (2016)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/marygrace-antony/6/