Australian women’s use of health and fitness apps and wearable devices: a feminist new materialism analysis

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Abstract

An extensive range of apps and wearable devices is available to women to monitor or improve their health and fitness. In this article, I adopt a feminist new materialism theoretical perspective to analyse interviews and focus group discussions with women who took part in The Australian Women and Digital Health Project about their use (or non-use) of these technologies. The findings identified not only the agential capacities opened up by women’s enactments with the affordances of health and fitness apps and wearable devices, but also the limitations of these technologies and the possibilities the women identified for future apps and devices. These findings highlight the tensions that can exist between the different demands that women face when attempting to conform to idealised and normative femininities and healthy citizenship. The women’s successful enactments of health apps and wearables that worked toward achieving the healthy, active, controlled body imagined by these technologies were disrupted or challenged by the demands of pregnancy, breastfeeding, chronic pain or disability or achieving the ideal of the caring mother. It is not surprising, therefore, that women imagined novel health technologies that would better cater for the diversity of their embodiment and demands of their everyday lives.

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Lupton, D. (2020). Australian women’s use of health and fitness apps and wearable devices: a feminist new materialism analysis. Feminist Media Studies, 20(7), 983–998. https://doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2019.1637916

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