Reimagining athletic nudity: the sexualization of sport as a sign of a 'porno-ization' of culture

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Abstract

This paper traces some historical and contemporary instances in which sporting and other bodies naked physiques have been utilized to affect religious, social, ideological or political agendas. We argue that inherent aesthetic values of performative flesh have been lost (or minimized) in recent times which have, intentionally or otherwise, degraded and objectified the naked body. To satisfy society's insatiable consumer needs and desires, bodies, especially sporting bodies, have been sexualized to the extreme. This overt sexualization is symptomatic of a wider porno-ization of western (North American and European) culture and cultural products. Porno-ization (characterized by exploitative modes of production for pecuniary gain) has limited our contemporary readings, and respect for, the body and its educational, transformative, artistic and emancipatory potential. Tentative though our theorization may be, we call readers to appreciate athletic nudity anew to re-imagine the eroticism of sporting bodies in cultural and aesthetic terms, akin to artistic appreciation rather than as provocative objects of sports' capitalistic desires. © 2013 © 2013 Taylor & Francis.

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APA

Jirasek, I., Kohe, G. Z., & Hurych, E. (2013). Reimagining athletic nudity: the sexualization of sport as a sign of a “porno-ization” of culture. Sport in Society, 16(6), 721–734. https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2012.753525

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