'Obviously it's worth it': The Value of being a Canadian Student Athlete in the U.S.A.

  • Gilgunn M
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Abstract

Each year, young, elite Canadian athletes travel south to attend American colleges and universities, funded in part by athletic scholarships. These 'student athletes' leave their home country to pursue opportunities they believe are only available in the U.S. The demands made on their time, finances, and personal wellbeing can be staggering. Yet for those who become student athletes, the value of the experience tends to be unquestionably identified as being 'worth it'. In this paper, I explore how this exhortation, repeated so readily by the individuals I interviewed during fieldwork in the U.S., reflects a complicated set of beliefs. This deceptively simple statement provides an entry point for understanding what Canadian student athletes find valuable about their experience and how they believe it affords them a degree of personal distinction that would have been impossible had they stayed in Canada. FU - Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of CanadaSocial Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) FX - The research upon which this essay is based was undertaken as part of a larger project entitled 'Coming of Age in an Era of Globalization: Achieving Cultural Distinction Through Student Travel Abroad' directed by Vered Amit and Noel Dyck and funded by a standard research grant provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. NR - 7 PU - BERGHAHN JOURNALS PI - BROOKLYN PA - 20 JAY ST, SUITE 512, BROOKLYN, NY 11201 USA

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APA

Gilgunn, M. (2010). “Obviously it’s worth it”: The Value of being a Canadian Student Athlete in the U.S.A. Anthropology in Action, 17(1). https://doi.org/10.3167/aia.2010.170106

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