Negotiating Masculinities via the Moral Problematization of Sport
Author(s) -
Richard Pringle,
Christopher Hickey
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
sociology of sport journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.762
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1543-2785
pISSN - 0741-1235
DOI - 10.1123/ssj.27.2.115
Subject(s) - problematization , negotiation , sexualization , sociology , gender studies , relation (database) , masculinity , sociology of sport , aesthetics , human sexuality , epistemology , social science , art , philosophy , database , computer science
Researchers have raised concerns about the construction of dangerous/problematic masculinities within sporting fratriarchies1. Yet little is known about how male sport enthusiasts—critical of hypermasculine performances—negotiate their involvement in sport. Our aim was to examine how males negotiated sporting tensions and how these negotiations shaped their (masculine) selves. We drew on Foucault (1992) to analyze how interviewees problematized their respective sport culture in relation to the sexualization of females, public drunkenness and excessive training demands. Results illustrated how the interviewees produced selves, via the moral problematization of sport, that rejected the values or moral codes of hypermasculinity in attempts to create ethical masculinities. We suggest that a proliferation of techniques of self that resist hypermasculine forms of subjection could be one form of ethical response to the documented problems surrounding masculinities and sport.
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