Gender, Sport, and Development in Africa : Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Patterns of Representations and Marginalization /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Dakar : Codesria, 2010.
Description:1 online resource (xiv, 154 pages).
Language:English
Series:Codesria book series
Codesria book series.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11120960
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Shehu, Jimoh.
Codesria.
ISBN:9782869783362
2869783361
9782869784017
2869784015
9782869783065
286978306X
Digital file characteristics:data file
Notes:"6/16/2010."
Includes bibliographical references.
Print version record.
Summary:To many young people, the term sport has an exhilarating ring; to many older persons, it signifies recreation and leisure. From colonial times, it has been viewed as a means of social control. Increasingly, it is being touted by governments and donor agencies as a self-evident tool of Africa's development. How accurate are these individual, romantic and moral notions of sport? In this volume, eleven African scholars offer insightful analyses of the complex ideological and structural dimensions of modern sport as a cultural institution.
Drawing on various theories and cross-cultural data, the contributors to this volume highlight the various ways in which sport norms, policies, practices and representations pervasively interface with gender and other socially constructed categories of difference. They argue that sport is not only a site of competition and physical recreation, but also a crossroad where features of modern society such as hegemony, identities, democracy, technology, development and master statuses intertwine and bifurcate. As they point out in many ways, sport production, reproduction, distribution and consumption are relational, spatial and contextual and, therefore, do not pay off for men, women and other social groups equally. The authors draw attention to the structure and scope of efforts needed to transform the exclusionary and gendered nature of sport processes to make them adequate to the task of engendering Africa's development.
Gender, Sport and Development in Africa is an immensely important contribution to current debates on the broader impacts of sport on society. It is an essential reading for students, policy-makers and others interested in perspectives that interrogate the grand narratives of sport as a neutral instrument of development in African countries. --Book Jacket.
Other form:Print version: Gender, sport, and development in Africa. Dakar : Codesria, 2010