Race and the politics of knowledge in sports science

dc.contributor.authorCleophas, Francois Johannesen_ZA
dc.date.accessioned2020-11-06T10:02:02Z
dc.date.available2020-11-06T10:02:02Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.descriptionCITATION: Cleophas, F. 2020. Race and the politics of knowledge in sports science. In: Jonathan Jansen & Cyrill Walters (eds). Fault Lines: A primer on race, science and society. Stellenbosch: SUN MeDIA. 191-202. doi:10.18820/9781928480495/12.
dc.description.abstractNo abstract available.en_ZA
dc.description.abstractSports science in South Africa was initially a neglected backwater in academic studies, undertaken by an eccentric group of tenacious dissidents.1 Previously the term “physical education” had been used, but in 1985 the discipline’s name was changed to “human movement studies”.2 The sports science curriculum, to this day, concerns itself narrowly with the technologies of sport performance, giving little consideration to the role of ideology and politics in the field. Two exceptions are the recent book Sport, Physical Culture, and the Moving Body: Materialisms, Technologies, Ecologies,3 edited by Joshua I. Newman, Holly Thorpe, and David Andrews, and Malcolm MacLean's article challenging the hegemonic practices of sports science, “(Re)Occupying a Cultural Commons: Reclaiming the Labour Process in Critical Sports Studies”.4 While there has been some attention paid to the politics of knowledge in physical education at school level,5 this is not the case in the university discipline known as “sports science”. As a consequence, most sports science students have not engaged critically with “racial science”, which, as this chapter will show, remains a powerful legacy of colonial and apartheid sport into the present. The vexed article6 emerged from the Department of Sport Science of Stellenbosch University that had only recently, in 2018, been reassigned from the Faculty of Education to the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. It is a study that makes the coloured body central to the discipline’s fixation on measurement; so, for example, the study cites theories that ascribe “the accelerated and unfavourable [cognitive] decline of women” to factors including “smaller head size … [and] lower cardiorespiratory fitness levels”.7 The cardiovascular health of the coloured women subjects was a factor in sampling decisions8 and their coloured bodies were lined up – as in the anthropometric studies of the past – for measurement purposes, this time for standard calculations of body mass index.9 All of this raises the critical question posed by Ronald Jackson: “How did black bodies become a problem in the first place?”10 The main purpose of this chapter, therefore, is to examine at close range the policies and practices that reinforced racism in the history of sports science in South Africa and their continuing legacy in university curricula.
dc.description.versionPublisher's version
dc.format.extent13 pages
dc.identifier.citationCleophas, F. 2020. Race and the politics of knowledge in sports science. In: Jonathan Jansen & Cyrill Walters (eds). Fault Lines: A primer on race, science and society. Stellenbosch: SUN MeDIA. 191-202. doi:10.18820/9781928480495/12
dc.identifier.isbn9781928480495 (ebook)
dc.identifier.otherdoi:10.18820/9781928480495/12
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/108921
dc.language.isoen_ZAen_ZA
dc.publisherAFRICAN SUN MeDIA
dc.rights.holderAFRICAN SUN MeDIA and Authors
dc.subjectSports sciences -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.subjectSports history -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.subjectDiscrimination in sports -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.subjectRace relations -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.subjectRacism in sports -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.subjectSports -- Social aspects -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.subjectSports -- Political aspects -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.subjectDiscrimination in sports -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.titleRace and the politics of knowledge in sports scienceen_ZA
dc.typeChapters in Booksen_ZA
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