Volleyball, but Make it Sexy: Mediated Representations of Female Athletes
Date
2022-05-06
Author
Advisor
Gould, Amanda Starling
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Abstract
The female athlete experience is complicated and beautiful. Women were long excluded
from the world of sport and looked at as “masculine” when they did compete. To combat
this fear of seeing “less feminine” women, sport organizers and mass media overcompensated;
now we see sportswomen wearing less. This trend is especially evident in my own sport
of volleyball. By examining the evolution of the beach volleyball uniform and media
representation of the sport, I hope to map patterns that can be tracked in other female
sports. I will call on frameworks established by researchers Linda Fuller, Paul Davis,
and Janet Fink to help us understand how meaningful differences in media coverage
of female athletics shape consumption of female sports and impact the female athletes
themselves. To situate the work in context, I will provide a historical perspective
on female athletics, looking at the rise of popular media and its impact on women’s
sports. When sex is used to sell sports, female athletes become pawns in an unwinnable
game.
Type
Capstone projectDepartment
Graduate Liberal StudiesPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25518Citation
Rosseland-Harrison, Frances (2022). Volleyball, but Make it Sexy: Mediated Representations of Female Athletes. Capstone project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25518.Collections
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