“…Over recent years, some feminist scholars have turned to new materialist and more-than-human theories (e.g., Braidotti, Barad, Deleuze) to expand their understanding of the affective, embodied, and material dimensions of women's movement practices (Thorpe et al, 2020;Baxter, 2020;Clark, 2020;Fullagar, 2020;Fullagar et al, 2021;Markula, 2023). In so doing, such approaches have offered a different perspective to the previous social constructionist literature of women's physical cultural experiences, highlighting how pleasure, joy, pain, guilt, longing, desire, and shame are entangled in more-than-human sporting and fitness assemblages, as well as signposting new capacities for transformation (Avner et al, 2021;Brice, 2022;Jeffrey et al, 2021Jeffrey et al, , 2022Markula, 2006aMarkula, , 2006bNichols et al, 2023;Pavlidis & Fullagar, 2013, 2015, 2016.…”