'I've always fought a little against the tide to get where I want to be'-construction of women's embodied subjectivity in the contested terrain of high-level karate
Turelli, Fabiana Cristina and Vaz, Alexandre Fernandez and Kirk, David (2023) 'I've always fought a little against the tide to get where I want to be'-construction of women's embodied subjectivity in the contested terrain of high-level karate. Social Sciences, 12 (10). 538. ISSN 2076-0760 (https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12100538)
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Abstract
Karate can be both a martial art and a combat sport. Male and female karate athletes attended the Tokyo Olympic Games 2020 (2021). Elite sport often portrays female athletes through the sexualization of their bodies, while the martial environment leaves them open to accusations of masculinization. In the process of constructing themselves as fighters, karateka women do produce new ways of performing femininities and masculinities, which is a hard-work process of negotiations, leading them to the construction of a particular habitus strictly linked to their performativity within the environment. They take part in a contested terrain that mixes several elements that are often contrasting. In this article, we aim to present factors identified with the women athletes of the Spanish Olympic karate team that affect the construction of their embodied subjectivities. We focus on two main topics, authenticity as the real deal to belonging, and a possible gendered habitus struggling with the achievement of the condition of a warrior. We carried out an ethnographic study with the Spanish Olympic karate squad supported by autoethnographic elements from the first author. We focus here on the data from double interviews with 14 women athletes and their four male coaches. Embodied subjectivity as a process of subject construction to disrupt objectification and forms of othering showed to be a challenge, a complex task, and embedded in contradictions. Karate women’s embodied subjectivities are built in the transit between resisting and giving in. Despite several difficulties, through awareness and reflection on limitations, karateka may occupy their place as subjects, exerting agency, feeling empowered, and fighting consciously against the naturalized ‘tide’.
ORCID iDs
Turelli, Fabiana Cristina, Vaz, Alexandre Fernandez and Kirk, David ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9884-9106;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 86822 Dates: DateEvent25 September 2023Published30 August 2023AcceptedSubjects: Education > Education (General) Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Strathclyde Institute of Education > Education Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 02 Oct 2023 16:18 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 14:05 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/86822