Abstract
This article offers an autoethnographic account of the author’s strained relationship with his older brother, as told around and through a summary and commentary of a professional wrestling match. In doing so, the article engages key concerns regarding autoethnographic writing as social science, with a focus on the practice’s potential and need to trouble the researcher. Lastly, the article makes an argument on behalf of a sociology that is inextricable from everyday habits, patterns, and routines.
Published Version
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