While research consistently shows news media's devaluation of female athletes, "the jockography," or sports autobiography, is one form of widely-consumed media through which female athletes can construct their own representation. However, there has been little consideration of the genre. This essay addresses this gap by analyzing how thirty women's jockographies published since 1992 rhetorically construct female athletic identity and sports practice. It finds that most athletes, regardless of their sport or racial or class background, constitute their identities and participation in ways that reinforce post-feminist notions of upward mobility and heterosexual femininity while failing to confront inequalities affecting women in sport. Nevertheless, a few recent jockographies challenge normalizing discourses, asking readers to recognize differences between women and confront inequities shaping their athletic experiences.
机构:
Ulster Univ, Arts Humanities & Social Sci Fac, 1 York St,Belfast Campus, Belfast BT15 1ED, North IrelandUlster Univ, Arts Humanities & Social Sci Fac, 1 York St,Belfast Campus, Belfast BT15 1ED, North Ireland
机构:
Arizona State Univ, Sch Social Transformat, Box 87-6403, Tempe, AZ 85287 USAArizona State Univ, Sch Social Transformat, Box 87-6403, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA