Stabbed, shot, left to die: Christy Martin and gender-based violence in boxing

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Abstract

This article presents a biographical narrative of Christy Martin, a former world champion boxer who survived being stabbed and shot by her trainer/husband. Rooted in a sociological imagination, this biographic research chronicles Martin’s boxing career and its entanglements with gender-based violence. The boxing industry has a widely acknowledged, yet under-reported, problem with men’s violence against women. This article aims to illustrate that women’s boxing should be critically examined for the ways in which it functions both as a site of and a sanctuary from gender-based violence. Within this paper, I draw from media coverage of Christy Martin’s boxing career, over 700 pages of transcripts from the subsequent criminal trial, an interview with Martin, as well as my own research in women’s boxing, including work with survivors of domestic violence.

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APA

van Ingen, C. (2021). Stabbed, shot, left to die: Christy Martin and gender-based violence in boxing. International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 56(8), 1154–1171. https://doi.org/10.1177/1012690220979716

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