Title: Sports in Society: Issues
1Sports in SocietyIssues Controversies
- Chapter 9
- Race and Ethnicity
- Are They Important in Sports?
2Defining Race Ethnicity
- Race refers to a category of people regarded as
socially distinct because they share genetic
traits believed to be important by people with
power and influence in society - An ethnic group is a category of people regarded
as socially distinct because they share a way of
life and a commitment to the ideas, norms, and
material things that constitute that way of life
3Minority Group
- Refers to a socially identified collection of
people who - Experience discrimination
- Suffer social disadvantages because of
discrimination - Possess a strong self-consciousness based on
their shared experiences of discriminatory
treatment
4The Concept of Race
- Racial categories are social creations based on
meanings given to selected physical traits - Race is not a valid biological concept
- Verified by data from Human Genome Project
- Racial classifications are fuzzy because they are
based on continuous traits with arbitrary lines
drawn to create categories - Racial classifications vary from culture to
culture
5Racial Categories Drawing Color Lines in Society
Snow white
Midnight black
Skin color continuum
Continuous Traits skin color, height, brain
size, nose width, leg length, leg length ratio,
of fast twitch muscle fibers, etc. Discrete
Traits blood type, sickle cell trait,
etc. Racial category lines can be drawn anywhere
and everywhere on this continuum! We could draw 2
or 2000 lines our decisions are a social
decisions, not decisions based on biology. Some
people draw many others draw few some reject
lines.
6Race in the United States
- Race is a primitive but powerful classification
system that has been used around the world - Race is based on a two-category classification
system premised on the rule of hypo-descent or
the one-drop rule - The one-drop rule was developed by white men to
insure the purity of the white race and
property control by white men - Mixed-race people challenge the validity of this
socially influential way of defining race
7Tiger Woods Disrupting Dominant Race Logic
- CABLINASIAN
- CA Caucasian
- BL Black
- IN Indian
- ASIAN Asian
8 Racial Ideology in History
- Racial classification systems were developed as
white Europeans explored and colonized the globe
and found that there were physical differences
between people - These systems were used to justify colonization,
conversion, and even slavery and genocide - According to these systems, white skin was the
standard, and dark skin was associated with
intellectual inferiority and slowed development
9Racial Ideology in Sports Today
- Racial ideology encourages people to
- See sport performances in racialized terms,
i.e., in terms of skin color - Use whiteness as the taken-for-granted standard
- Explain the success or failure of people with
dark skin in racial terms - Do research designed to discover racial
difference
10Figure 9.2
Racial ideologies often influence how athletes
are assessed in society and in science.
11Traditional Racial Ideology Used in Sports
- Achievements of White Athletes are due to
- Character
- Culture
- Organization
- Achievements of Black Athletes are due to
- Biology
- Natural physical abilities
12A Sociological Hypothesis
- Racial ideology discrimination sport
opportunities - Beliefs about biological cultural destiny
-
- Motivation to develop skills
- OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN SPORTS
13Searching For Jumping Genes in Black Bodies
- Why is the search misleading?
- It is based on oversimplified ideas about genes
and how they work - It mistakenly assumes that jumping is a simple
physical activity related to a single gene or
interrelated set of genes - It often begins with ideas about skin color and
with social definitions of race
14The Power of Racial Ideology
- Black male students often have a difficult time
shaking athlete labels based on racial ideology - Young people from all racial backgrounds may make
choices influenced by racial ideology - In everyday life, racial ideology is integrally
linked to ideas about gender and social class
15Figure 9.4
Athletes often bring cultural traditions to the
playing field
16Sport Participation amongAfrican Americans
- The facts show that
- Prior to the 1950s, African Americans faced a
segregated sport system - African Americans participate in a very limited
range of sports - African American men and women are
underrepresented in most sports
17Sport Participation amongNative Americans
- Native Americans comprise dozens of diverse
cultural groups - Traditional Native American sports combine
physical activities with ritual and ceremony - Native Americans often fear losing their culture
when they play Euro-American sports - Stereotypes used in sports discourage Native
American participation
18Images of Native Americans in Sports
- Using stereotypes of Native Americans as a
basis for team names, logos, and mascots is a
form of bigotry, regardless of the intentions of
those who do it - Are there conditions under which a group or
organizations could use the cultural and
religious images of others for their own
purposes? - What would happen if a school named their teams
the Olympians and used the Olympic logo (5-Rings)
as their logo?
19Figure 9.5
The racial and ethnic attitudes of team officials
are sometimes hypocritical
20What happens when stereotypes are built into
sport culture?
21Why have stereotypes about Native Americans
persisted in U.S. sports?
22Why have other ethnic stereotypes been rejected
in U.S. sports?
23Using Native American team names has often led to
offensive media coverage
24Sport Participation amongLatinos Hispanics
- The experiences of Latino and Latina athletes
have been ignored until recently - Stereotypes about physical abilities have
influenced perceptions of Latino athletes - Latinos now make up over 25 of Major League
Baseball players - Latinos often confront discrimination in school
sports - Latinas have been overlooked due to faulty
generalizations about gender and culture
25Sport Participation amongAsian Americans
- The cultural heritage and histories of Asian
Americans are very diverse - The sport participation patterns of Asian
Americans vary with their immigration histories - Little is known about how the images of Asian
American athletes are represented in the media
and minds of people in the US
26The Dynamics of Racial Ethnic Relations in
Sports
- Race and ethnicity remain significant in sports
today - Todays challenges are not the ones faced in the
past - It is a mistake to think that racial and ethnic
issues disappear when desegregation occurs - The challenge of dealing with inter-group
relations never disappears it changes in terms
of the issues that must be confronted
27Eliminating Racial Ethnic Exclusion in Sports
(I)
- Changes are most likely when
- People with power and control benefit from
inclusion - Individual performances can be measured precisely
and objectively - Members of an entire team benefit from the
achievements of teammates - (continued)
28Eliminating Racial Ethnic Exclusion in Sports
(II)
- Changes are most likely when
- Superior performances do not lead to automatic
promotions on teams - Team success does not depend on off-the-field
socializing and friendships - Athletes have little power or authority in the
organizational structure of a sport organization
or team
29After Inclusion Managing Racial Ethnic
Diversity
- Racial and Ethnic Diversity creates
management challenges related to - The social dynamics on teams
- The social dynamics among spectators
- The marketing of athletes, teams, and leagues
- NOTE The global recruitment of players insures
that diversity issues will always exist in sports
30The Biggest Challenge Integrating Positions of
Power
- Even when sport participation is racially and
ethnically mixed, power in sports is not readily
shared - The movement of minorities into coaching and
administrative positions has been very slow - Social and legal pressures are still needed
before power is fully shared
31Needed Changes
- Regular and direct confrontation of racial and
ethnic issues by people in positions of power - A new vocabulary for dealing with new forms of
racial and ethnic diversity in our lives - Training sessions dealing with practical problems
and issues, not just feelings
32Using Critical Theory to Ask Questions About
Racial Classification Systems
- Which classification systems are used?
- Who uses them?
- Why are some people so dedicated to using certain
classification systems? - What are the consequences of usage?
- Can negative consequences be minimized?
- Can the systems be challenged?
- What occurs when systems change?
33The Racially Natural Athlete?
- There is no evidence showing that skin color is
related to physical traits that are essential for
athletic excellence across sports or in any
particular sport.
34Socially Constructing the Black Male Body Racial
Ideology in Action
- In Euro-American history there has been
- Strong fears of the physical power and prowess of
(oppressed) black men - Powerful anxieties about the sexual appetites and
capabilities of (angry) black men - Deep fascination with the movement of the black
body - THEREFORE, the black male body
- valuable entertainment commodity
35 Research Summary(Genetic Factors Athletic
Performance)
- Are there genetic differences between
individuals? YES - Are genetic characteristics related to athletic
excellence? YES - Could one gene account for success across a range
of different sports? PROBABLY NOT - Might skin color genes physical performance
genes be connected? NO EVIDENCE
36Research Summary (Continued)
- Are physical development the expression of
skills in sports related to cultural definitions
of skin color and race? DEFINITELY YES - Do cultural ideas about skin color race
influence the interpretation of and meaning given
to the movement and achievements of athletes?
DEFINITELY YES
37Social Origins of Athletic Excellence
- A cultural emphasis on achievement in activities
that have special cultural meaning - Resources to support widespread participation
among young people - Opportunities to gain rewards through success
- Access to those who can teach tactics and
strategies
38Consequences of Racial Ideology in Sports
- Desegregation of revenue producing sports
- Continued racial exclusion in social sports
- Position stacking in team sports
- Racialized interpretations of achievements
- Management barriers for blacks
- Skewed distribution of African Americans in US
colleges and universities