Title: Sociology of Sport
1Sociology of Sport
2C. Wright Mills and the Sociological Imagination
3What is the Sociological Imagination?
- A form of consciousness or frame of mind that
looks beyond the here and now of social
interaction. - In addition to looking at the current and
immediate aspects of human interaction and social
organization, the sociological imagination also
looks at the historical and broader social
aspects.
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5Using the Sociological Imagination
Personal Troubles (Immediate Aspects)
I know an anorexic athlete.
6Using the Sociological Imagination
- Exploring an Object from Everyday Life
7Step 1
Description--Immediate Aspects
- What is the object under consideration?
- What would you call it?
- How would you describe it in detail?
8Step 2
Current and Local Analysis
- How is it used?
- When and where is it used?
- How is it bought and sold? Be specific as
possible. - Who benefits from it?
- Why does it appear the way it does?
- How does it directly relate to your life and/or
to the lives of others you know?
9Step 3
Broader Social (Global) Analysis
- Does the object exist in other countries? If so,
in what form? - How is it used in other countries? How is this
use different than its use in Canada? - Is it altered in any way when it is used
elsewhere? - Where and how is it made?
- What would life be like without this object?
- Does it affect life on the planet in any
significant way?
10Step 4
Historical Analysis
- When did the object come into existence? Why did
it appear at this time? - How has the object changed over time?
- How has the use of this object changed over time?
- What other aspects of social life have changed as
a result of this object? - How has your own use of this object changed over
time? - What will this object be like 10 years from now?
Will it still exist later on in the future?
11Summing up the Sociological Imagination I
The sociological imagination allows us to
understand
- where individuals are located in society and
history - how their circumstances are like or unlike those
of similar others in their society or historical
period - how human experiences are structured and made
meaningful by the larger social forces of their
society
12Summing up the Sociological Imagination II
- The sociological imagination allows us to develop
better understandings of society which in turn
encourages people to make social changes that are
universally beneficial and that allow people
greater freedoms. - The more we know about why we act as we do and
the overall workings of society, the more likely
we are to be able to influence our own futures.
(Giddens http//www.lse.ac.uk/Giddens/FAQs.htmSt
ructQ2)
13For Next Class
- Read the article by Chambliss posted on ACME
- Come prepared to discuss this article and the
following question - What taken-for-granted assumption about
excellence in swimming does Chamblisss research
challenge? - Read Coakley and Donnelly, Chapter 2, and
complete the discussion questions posted on ACME
submit them to turnitin.com before 800 a.m.
Tuesday
14Focus of Sociology of Sport
- Sport sociologists look at the reality outside
individuals involved with sport (athletes,
participants, spectators, etc.) that is, they
look at the societies and cultures in which
sports are created and transformed - Sport sociologists often think about how sports
have been and might be transformed
15Key Terms in Sociology of Sport
- Society
- a collection of people living in a defined
geographical area united through a political
system and a shared sense of self-identification
(Coakley and Donnelly, 2001, p. 3) - Culture
- ways of life people create in a particular
society (Coakley and Donnelly, 2001, p. 3) - symbolic forms and the everyday practices through
which people express and experience meaning
(Hall, Slack and Whitson, 1991)
16Discussion Question
- Are sport and physical activity cultural
activities? Explain your answer.
17Arguments Against Viewing Sport and Physical
Activity as Culture
- culture is found in the high artsactivities that
move us beyond our basic natural instincts and
toward refinement - culture is the context in which intellectual
growth is fostered and refers to specific skills
and activities that are considered as being best
18Arguments in Favour of Viewing Sport and Physical
Activity as Culture
- The definition of culture as high culture is
ethnocentricit is characterized by a belief that
ones own group is more culturally important than
another's group - sports and physical activity can be viewed as
cultural practices because - they are human creations
- they have different forms and meanings at
different times which make them social
constructions
19Discussion Question
- Much recent research in the sociology of sport
focuses on the body in social and cultural terms
rather than biological terms. This research is
based on the notion that the body is socially
constructed and given meaning within the context
of culture. - Explain what this means and state some of the
issues that sociologists might study as they
focus on the body as a social phenomenon.
20Discussion Question
- In Ch. 1 it was explained that sports are
"contested activities" and that people sometimes
debate and struggle about "Who will participate
in sports and under what conditions will their
participation occur?" Identify two issues over
which people have debated and struggled when it
comes to the meaning and organization of sports.
21For Next Class
- Read the article on reserve by Chambliss
- Come prepared to discuss the Chambliss article
and the following question - What taken-for-granted assumption about
excellence in swimming does Chamblisss research
challenge? - Read Coakley and Donnelly, Chapter 2 and complete
the discussion questions posted on ACME.