Gendertyping sports: social representations of masculine,feminine, and neither-gendered sports among US university students |
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Authors: | Jeffery Sobal Michelle Milgrim |
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Affiliation: | 1. Division of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA;2. Employee Wellness, Northwell Health, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | Sport is shifting from being hegemonically masculine but it is unclear how sports are viewed as gender segregated or gender integrated. Previous quantitative studies of gendertyping sports have reported mixed findings. Gendertyping constructs social representations that shape institutional and individual sport activities. This study examined how particular sports are represented as masculine, feminine and/or neither-gendered in one sample of 310 students at a US university. Qualitative open-ended recall questions asked students to name three masculine, feminine and neither masculine nor feminine sports. Results revealed that most students were aware of and used hegemonic gendertyped terms to describe sports. Recall questions elicited 2515 namings of 80 different sports that were arrayed as a spectrum of social representations of gendertyped sports ranging from masculine to neither-gendered to feminine. Some representations were hegemonic segregated masculine sports, many were integrated neither-gendered sports, and fewer were segregated feminine sports. Gendertyped social representations of sports offer cultural toolkits for calibrating the practices of doing and redoing gender in sport. |
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Keywords: | Hegemonic Masculinity gendertyping neither-gendered social representations sports university students |
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