Thursday, April 25, 2013

DEAR MEDIA: THIS IS HOW YOU DO IT !!!

Take notes this is how you Talk about female Athletes.  



http://www.swishappeal.com/2013/3/24/4140282/ncaa-womens-basketball-tournament-2013-brittney-griner-bob-knight-video




Jake Simpson, March 21, 2013: The Altantic
Baylor University's peerless 6'8" center Brittney Griner."I saw her score five different baskets off of five different moves," Knight marveled. "You ever coach against [Lew] Alcindor?" Auriemma asked him. "In the women's game, she's probably what he was in the men's game: There's just no other person like that. You can't go into a game and feel like there's anything you can do to neutralize her. ... [Other teams] can't do anything about this kid."This small exchange between Knight and Auriemma sums up pretty bluntly what makes Griner so astonishing—she's unstoppable. But it also showcases another reason Brittney Griner is a revolutionary figure in sports. The way fans, coaches, and the mainstream media talk about Griner is a subtly radical, relatively new, and pretty damn great way to talk about women in sports: as an athlete.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Not all athletes wear shoes!!!

Janis Prince Inniss, May 03,2010;Everyday sociology blog

 

“male track athletes wear what looks like a one-piece body suit –some with sleeves, some sleeveless with pants that are a few inches above their knees. The men are fully-covered, although in form revealing garments. The women? Their uniforms consist of midriff-bearing tops and panty-sized shorts!”

 Woman Jumping the HurdlesJumping the Hurdles

Alfred Dennis Mathewson Remediating Discrimination Against African American Female Athletes at the Intersection of Title IX and Title VI, 2 Wake Forest Journal of Law and Policy 295 (2012)(195 Footnotes Omitted)
In the Title IX Race Toward Gender Equity, the Black Female Athlete Is Left to Finish Last: The Lack of Access for the Invisible Woman,

Monday, April 22, 2013

http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/rearvision/a-question-of-gender-the-sex-testing-of-female/4087112
Pink Female Signs

Laura A Wackwitz, Verifying the myth: olympic sex testing and the category “woman”, Women's Studies International Forum, Volume 26, Issue 6, November–December 2003, Pages 553-560, ISSN 0277-5395, 10.1016/j.wsif.2003.09.009." The assumption that there are, and should be, two and only two forms of the human body—male and female."

 
 
http://fairgamenews.com/2012/06/radio-talk-on-the-coverage-challenge-for-female-athletes-getting-ink-and-airtime-without-playing-the-sexy-card/      
 Amber Lee(Featured Columnist) on August 10, 2012 "Swagger" “Basically, it boils down to athletes selling sex. If you want to spend your days sometimes you have to spend your nights in a bikini. In a perfect world, these exchanges wouldn't be necessary, but the world is rarely fair.




Sex Kitten




Isn’t that just plain funny?

JOURNAL OF SPORT HISTORYby Patricia Vertinsky

DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATIONAL STUDIES

UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

and

Gwendolyn Captain

OFFICE OF STUDENT AFFAIRS

LESLEY COLLEGE

one is overwhelmed by the silence, inaccuracy, and misrepresentation in instances

where African American female athletes and the enduring nature of negative

and limiting images, which have historically ordered her reality in American

society, have been made more “visible.”61

We are talking about myth here, those boundaries of discourse that

determine belief, practice and desire.62

Gwendolyn Captain has examined the historical construction
The world is changing. This is a good thing. Athletes are leading the way –and female and African-American athletes have long changed white attitudes, simply by showing up and showing off their athletic skills.Black Power, Female Athletes, and a Controversial Poem Called “The Change”March 15, 2011 — Mariah Burton
                The Change                       
The season turned like the page of a glossy fashion magazine.
In the park the daffodils came up
and in the parking lot, the new car models were on parade

Sometimes I think that nothing really changes—
The young girls show the latest crop of tummies,
and the new president proves that he’s a dummy.

But remember the tennis match we watched that year?
Right before our eyes

some tough little European blonde
pitted against that big black girl from Alabama,
cornrowed hair and Zulu bangles on her arms,
some outrageous name like Vondella Aphrodite—

We were just walking past the lounge
and got sucked in by the screen above the bar,
and pretty soon
we started to care about who won,

putting ourselves into each whacked return
as the volleys went back and forth and back
like some contest between
the old world and the new,

and you loved her complicated hair
and her to-hell-with-everybody stare,
and I,
I couldn’t help wanting
the white girl to come out on top,

because she was one of my kind, my tribe,
with her pale eyes and thin lips


and because the black girl was so big
and so black,
so unintimidated


hitting the ball like she was driving the Emancipation Proclamation
down Abraham Lincoln’s throat,
like she wasn’t asking anyone’s permission.There are moments when history
passes you so close
you can smell its breath,
you can reach your hand out
and touch it on its flank
and I don’t watch all that much Masterpiece Theatre,
but I could feel the end of an era there
in front of those bleachers full of people
in their Sunday tennis-watching clothes
as that black girl wore down her opponent
then kicked her ass good
then thumped her once more for good measure
and stood up on the red clay courtholding her racket over her head like a guitar.
And the little pink judge
had to climb up on a box
to put the ribbon on her neck

still managing to smile into the camera flash,
even though everything was changing

 and in fact, everything had already changed—
Poof, remember? It was the twentieth century almost gone,
we were there,and when we went to put it back where it belonged,
it was past us
and we were changed.

"The Change", Tony Hoagland



 







 
 
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Knight, Jennifer L.; Giuliano,Traci A.
Sex Roles. Aug2001, Vol. 45 Issue 3/4, p217-229. 13p. 1 Graph. ["He's a Laker; She's a "Looker": The Consequences of Gender-Stereotypical Portrayals of Male and Female Athletes by the Print Media."]
 
 
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