Connotations of female movement and meaning: The development of women's participation in the Olympic Games
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The modern Olympic Games are the world’s largest sporting event, drawing more
participants and attracting more spectators from more diverse places worldwide
than any other sporting competition. The Olympic Games are also significant in
that they highlight international competition for sportswomen. However, female
Olympians have yet to achieve parity with male Olympians in respect to the number
of participants or the number of sporting events. Long excluded from many
sports within the Olympic Games, women have not had equal opportunity to pursue
the Olympic motto of Citius, Altius, Fortius (Faster, Higher, Stronger). In this
article we extend the now largely accepted political accounts for women’s restricted
Olympic competition by offering a more nuanced sociological explanation for the
slow increase of female participation and evolution of new sport forms in the summer
Olympic Games.
Our sociological explanation combines the insights of Eleanor Metheny and
Pierre Bourdieu concerning the connotations of movement and meaning in sport
for females, and highlights the relationship between embodiment and empowerment
in sporting practices. We follow John Hargreaves who contends that the body
constitutes the “most striking symbol” and “core of sporting activity” as well as “a
major site of social struggles” around power and gender.1