TOUGH ENOUGH AND WOMAN ENOUGH: Stereotypes, Discrimination, and Impression Management Among Women Professional Boxers
In: Journal of sport and social issues: the official journal of Northeastern University's Center for the Study of Sport in Society, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 7-36
Abstract
Women have traditionally been credited only with marginal roles in the sport of boxing, even though they have competed as pugilists since the late 1880s. The author interviewed 12 women professional boxers in the United States in an effort to understand their position as athletes who compete in a sport considered deviant for women. This revealed that women pugilists face discrimination at gyms and in competitions, are aware of numerous stereotypes as a result of their participation in a deviant sport, and use several strategies to manage their identity in an effort to remain marketable in the industry. They are aware of the need for balance of a public identity that appears neither too masculine nor too feminine. This balance is done in an effort to avoid negative sanctions and thus improve chances of becoming a successful professional boxer.
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