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  • Gender and Sexuality
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Slide Show: 6 Ways the Media Represents Female Athletes

Slide Show: 6 Ways the Media Represents Female Athletes

By The NationTwitter

August 1, 2011

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August 1, 2011

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Slide Show: 6 Ways The Media Represents Female Athletes

Female athletes are significantly more likely to be portrayed in ways that emphasize their femininity and heterosexuality over their athletic prowess, often with the justification that such depictions attract fans to women’s sports. But as Mary Jo Kane reports in her article in this week’s special Sports issue, far from piquing interest in female sports, hyper-sexualized media images actually serve to suppress interest in—and respect for—women’s sports.

 

In her research, Kane has identified categories into which the representation of female athletes consistently fall—from competent athlete to soft-core porn star, here are the six ways the media represents sportswomen.

 

Players in the Lingerie Football League’s First Annual Lingerie Bowl

 

Credit: Getty Images/Frazer Harrison 

In a straightforward representation of a sportswoman’s athletic competence, the athlete is portrayed in uniform, on court and in action. In Kane’s research, this mode of representation was the most likely to increase fans’ interest in women’s sports.

 

Abby Wambach of the US scores against Brazil’s goalkeeper Andreia Suntaque and defender Daiane Menezes Rodrigues during the Women’s World Cup quarter-final in Dresden, July 10, 2011

 

Credit: Reuters Pictures 

In the ambivalent mode of representation, indications of athleticism are present, but the primary image features a non-athletic, off court, feminine portrayal.

 

Chelsea Davis, Florida State Women’s Basketball, from the Florida State Women’s Basketball Media Guide

 

Credit: Dave Barfield 

In this “wholesome” mode of representation, the sportswoman is shown with minimal or no indication of athleticism.

 

Michelle Wie, Professional Golfer

 

Credit: Sports Illustrated/Getty Images/Walter Iooss Jr. 

The hyper-heterosexual portrayal takes a well-known female athlete and explicitly links her to traditional heterosexual roles, such as girlfriend, wife or mother.

 

Mia Hamm, former Olympian and professional soccer player with husband Nomar Garciaparra

 

Credit: Getty Images/Lisa Blumenfeld 

The “sexy babe” mode, which represents a “hot” female athlete, falls just short of soft pornography.

 

Lindsey Vonn, Olympic skier 

The soft pornography mode of representation, such as when world-class athletes appear semi-nude in men’s magazines, simply reinforces sexual objectification of sportswomen and, as Kane’s research shows, alienates and offends many sports’ core fan base.

 

For more on the bad science—not to mention bad politics—behind the media’s representation of female athletes, read Kane’s article in The Nation’s special sports issue.

 

Selina Wagner, Annika Doppler, Julia Simic, Kristina Gessat and Ivana Rudelic of the German national soccer team on the cover of Playboy

 

For more images from Mary Jo Kane’s research, visit the website of the Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in Sport at the University of Minnesota. 

The NationTwitterFounded by abolitionists in 1865, The Nation has chronicled the breadth and depth of political and cultural life, from the debut of the telegraph to the rise of Twitter, serving as a critical, independent, and progressive voice in American journalism.


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