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Sports in Society: Issues and Controversies

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Title: Sports in Society: Issues and Controversies


1
Sports in SocietyIssues and Controversies
  • Chapter 4
  • Sports and Socialization
  • Who Plays and What Happens to Them?

2
SocializationMain Definition
  • Socialization
  • Is an active process of learning and social
    development
  • Occurs as we interact with others
  • Involves the formation of ideas about who we are
    and what is important in our lives

3
Stevensons Findings(1999)
  • Becoming an elite athlete involves
  • The process of introduction and involvement
  • The process of developing commitment

4
Donnelly Youngs Findings (1999)
  • Becoming an athlete in a sport subculture
    involves
  • Acquiring knowledge about the sport
  • Associating with people in the sport
  • Learning the norms of the sport
  • Receiving recognition and acceptance from other
    athletes

5
Coakley Whites Findings (1999)
  • Deciding to play sports depends on
  • Ideas about sports connection to other interests
    and goals
  • Desires to develop display competence
  • Social and material support
  • Memories of past experiences in sports
  • General cultural images and messages about sports

6
Functionalist and Conflict Theory Research on
Dropping Out of Sports
  • People dont drop out forever, nor do they cut
    all ties with sports
  • Dropping out is tied to other changes and
    transitions in a persons life
  • Dropping out is not related only to bad
    experiences
  • Dropping out may cause problems among those who
  • Have identities grounded totally in sports
  • Lack social material resources

7
Coakleys Findings (1992)
  • Burnout among elite adolescent athletes was most
    likely when
  • High performance sports were organized so that
    athletes had little control over their lives
  • Sport involvement was perceived to interfere with
    accomplishing important developmental tasks

8
Koukouris Findings (1994)
  • Ending or reducing sport participation was
    associated with
  • The need to find a job and become independent
  • Realistic assessments of sport skills and
    potential for future achievements
  • Efforts to stay physically active and connected
    with sports

9
Summary Changing or Ending Competitive Sport
Participation
  • Changes in participation are grounded in
    decision-making processes tied to peoples lives,
    life courses, and social worlds
  • Identity issues and developmental issues are
    important
  • Problems are most likely when sport participation
    has constricted a persons life

10
Being Involved in SportsWhat Happens?
  • In some cultures people believe that sports
    automatically build positive traits and
    relationships among all participants

11
Factors Often Overlooked in Research on Character
Building in Sports
  • Different sports offer different experiences
  • Selection processes in organized sports favor
    some characteristics over others
  • Different people define sport experiences in
    different ways
  • Meanings given to sport experiences often change
    over time
  • Social relationships mediate sports experiences
  • Many activities other than sports can provide
    character-building experiences

12
Sport Participation Is Most Likely to Produce
Positive Effects When (I)
  • New non-sport identities are formed
  • Knowledge is gained about the world beyond sports
  • Experiences go beyond sports
  • New relationships are formed that go beyond
    sports


  • (continued)

13
Sport Participation Is Most Likely to Produce
Positive Effects When (II)
  • Lessons learned in sports are applied to
    situations outside of sports
  • Participants are seen by others as total human
    beings, not just athletes
  • General competence and responsibility are learned

14
General Summary
  • If playing sports constricts or limits a persons
    life, expect negative socialization effects
  • If playing sports expands or diversifies a
    persons life, expect positive socialization
    effects

15
Power Performance Versus Pleasure
Participation Sports
  • Pleasure/Participation
  • Emphasis on connections between people
  • Ethic of expression, enjoyment, health
  • Body source of pleasure
  • Inclusion accom-modation of differences
  • Democratic structures
  • Compete with others
  • Power/Performance
  • Use power to push limits in pursuit of victories
  • Excellence proved through winning
  • Body tool and weapon
  • Competence-based inclusion/exclusion
  • Hierarchical structures
  • Opponents enemies

16
Studies of Sport Experiences
  • The voices of sport participants indicate that
  • People define and give meaning to their sport
    experiences in connection with their social
    relationships
  • Meanings given to sport experiences are grounded
    in cultural definitions about gender, race
    ethnicity, social class, sexuality, and other
    characteristics defined as socially important

17
Fines Findings (1987)
  • The moral socialization that occurs in little
    league baseball
  • Depends on how the boys hear and apply the
    moral messages from adults
  • Emphasizes masculinity as involving toughness and
    dominance

18
Theberges Findings (2000)
  • The locker rooms of womens ice hockey teams are
    key places in which
  • Women bond with each other and form a sense of
    community
  • The players use relationships with each other to
    develop meanings for their sport participation
    and apply those meanings to to their lives

19
Crossets Findings (1995)
  • The lives of women athletes in the LPGA were
    influenced by gender relations in U.S. culture
  • The women developed an ethic of prowess a
    mindset highlighting a commitment to physical
    competence as a basis for evaluating self and
    others on the tour
  • This ethic existed to neutralize the negative
    effects of traditional ideas about femininity
  • Conformity to the ethic helped the women
    legitimize their roles as professional athletes

20
Wacquants Findings (1992)
  • The social world of the boxing gym
  • Was created in connection with the social forces
    in the black ghetto and its masculine street
    culture
  • Sheltered black men from the full destructive
    impact of social and cultural forces in their
    lives
  • Provided a disciplined regime of body regulation
    that established a positive identity and
    separated the men from the negative influences of
    a chaotic environment

21
Studies of Socialization As a Community
Cultural Process
  • ?Sports are sites for struggling over how we
    think and what we do
  • ?Sports are sites where people create and learn
    stories they can use to make sense of the world
  • ?Sports consist of vocabularies and images that
    influence ideology

22
Socialization and the Formation of Ideology
  • ?Hegemony is the process of forming agreement
    about particular ways of viewing and making sense
    of the world
  • ?Sports are important sites for hegemonic
    processes because they provide pleasurable
    experiences to so many people
  • ?Corporate sponsors use sports to establish
    ideological outposts in peoples heads

23
Sport, Socialization, Ideology
  • Research shows that none of us live outside the
    influence of ideology
  • The stories that emerge in connection with sports
    and sport experiences generally reproduce
    dominant forms of ideology, but they also can
    challenge and even transform dominant ideology
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