Body Talk: Male Athletes Reflect on Sport, Injury, and Pain
- 1 June 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Human Kinetics in Sociology of Sport Journal
- Vol. 11 (2) , 175-194
- https://doi.org/10.1123/ssj.11.2.175
Abstract
This paper examines how participation in physically demanding sport, with its potential and actual injurious outcomes, both challenges and reinforces dominant notions of masculinity. Data from 16 in-depth interviews with former and current Canadian adult male athletes indicate that sport practices privileging forceful notions of masculinity are highly valued, and that serious injury is framed as a masculinizing experience. It is argued that a generally unreflexive approach to past disablement is an extraordinary domain feature of contemporary sport. The risks associated with violent sport appear to go relatively unquestioned by men who have suffered debilitating injury and whose daily lives are marked by physical constraints and pain.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Very Straight Gay: Masculinity, Homosexual Experience, and the Dynamics of GenderAmerican Sociological Review, 1992
- Men, Masculinity, and the MediaPublished by SAGE Publications ,1992