Readjusting Our Sporting Sites/Sight: Sportification and the Theatricality of Social Life

Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 9 (3):257-270 (2015)
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Abstract

This paper points out the potential of using sport for the analysis of society. Cultivated human movement is a specific social and cultural subsystem, yet it becomes a part of wider social discourses by extending some of its characteristics into various other spheres. This process, theorised as sportification, provides as useful concept to examine the permeation of certain phenomena from the area of sport into the social reality outside of sport. In this paper, we investigate the phenomena of sportification which we parallel with visual culture and spectatorship practices in the Renaissance era. The emphasis in our investigation is on theatricality and performativity; particularly, the superficial spectator engagement with modern sport and sporting spectacles. Unlike the significance afforded to visualisation and deeper symbolic interpretation in Renaissance art, contemporary cultural shifts have changed and challenged the ways in which the active a..

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References found in this work

In defense of posthuman dignity.Nick Bostrom - 2005 - Bioethics 19 (3):202–214.
Sport is not art.David Best - 1985 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 12 (1):25-40.
Sport as a drama.Lev Kreft - 2012 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 39 (2):219-234.

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