Sport

Susan Brownell, Niko Besnier

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Activities that one can retrospectively label as ‘sport’ have probably been part of human beings’ repertoire for millennia, but sports as we know them today are the product of a modernity that arose from the late eighteenth century at the juncture of civil society, industrial capitalism, muscular Christianity, and the colonial expansion of North Atlantic states. Today, it is deeply intertwined with neoliberal capital, media technology, and neocolonial relations between the Global South and the Global North, as well as structures of inequality within nation-states in the Global North. Despite its neglect as an anthropological subject, sport under all its guises, from its effect on individual bodies to its spectacular manifestations in the rituals of mega-events, is a perfect object for an anthropological analysis inspired by ritual theory, exchange theory, feminist anthropology, and ethnographic approaches to globalization.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalThe Cambridge Encyclopedia of Anthropology
DOIs
StatePublished - May 14 2019

Keywords

  • health politics

Disciplines

  • Anthropology

Cite this