Index
2019; Elsevier BV; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1108/s1476-285420190000012019
ISSN1476-2854
Tópico(s)Sports injuries and prevention
ResumoCitation (2019), "Index", The Suffering Body in Sport (Research in the Sociology of Sport, Vol. 12), Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, pp. 195-202. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1476-285420190000012019 Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited Copyright © 2019 Emerald Publishing Limited INDEX ACCS. See Acute common care system (ACCS) ACPSM. See Association of Chartered Physiotherapists in Sports Medicine (ACPSM) Activity-limiting pain, 182–183 Acute common care system (ACCS), 27–28 Adversity, voice and perspective through, 114–115 Agar v Canning (1965), 147–153 Age, 129 Alves, Dani, 124 American football, 95–96 American Medical Association, 94 Amplified risk-taking, 9–10 Amputations, trauma-related, 76–77 Association of Chartered Physiotherapists in Sports Medicine (ACPSM), 28 Athletes autobiographies, elite, 110–112 committed controlled, 113–114 empowered, in transition, 116–117 gender identities, 127–128 intactness of, 124–125 long-term membership, 9–10 responses to brain injury, 97 soul-nourishing in, 131–132 suicides of professional, 11–12 Athletes, female and disordered eating, 107–108 elite, 107–108 injury, 96 Athletic State Commissions, 170 Attitudes eating, 106 hyper-masculine, 127–128 negative, 130–131 Australian (Rules) Football League (AFL), 92 Australian swimming culture, 108 Autobiography, 106–107 elite athlete, 110–112 Autoethnography, 57 Autonomy clinician, 32–33 over body, lack of, 183–184 Bannister, Roger, 24 BASEM. See British Association of Sport and Exercise Medicine (BASEM) Basketball, midnight, 128–129 BASM. See British Association of Sports Medicine (BASM) Beard, Amanda, 112–114, 117–118 Behaviors eating, 106 risk-taking, 180–181 rule-violating, 155–156 Biomedical model, 134–135 Bleeding, self-inflicted, 173 Body acceptance, fluidity of, 116 Body-related surveillance, 114 Bourdieu’s theory, 124 Boxing and Wrestling Commission, 172–173 Boxing and Wrestling Commissioner Chairman (BWCC), 174 Brain injury, 101 athlete responses to, 97 committee, mild traumatic, 94 Brain shaking, velocity, 90 Brain trauma, 10 British Association of Sport and Exercise Medicine (BASEM), 27–28 British Association of Sports Medicine (BASM), 27–28 The British Journal of Sports Medicine (1966), 27–28 British Olympic sport, 32–33 Brown, Michael, 12 Canadian case law, 154, 156–158 Canadian ice hockey, civil law claims in, 148–151 Canadian tort law, claims and defences under, 147 Career assistance programs, 188 Carlos, John, 12 Case law shows, 147–155 CDA. See Critical discourse analysis (CDA) Celebration of styles of reckless, 9–10 Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 91–92 Champagne v Cummings , 153–154 Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (CSP), 28 Chicago parkour community, 48 Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE), 90, 91, 94, 99–100, 101, 168–169 CISG. See Concussion in Sport Guidelines (CISG) Civil law claims, in Canadian ice hockey, 148–151 Clinicians autonomy, 32–33 of Olympic sports, 30–31 sports medicine, legitimacy of, 32–33 Committed controlled athlete, 113–114 Community-based sports program, India, 129 Concussion, 90 concerns, history, 93–96 in context, 91–96 feature of, 91, 97–98 incidence of, 91–92 issues of, 96 medical treatment of, 98 social issue of, 91 social relations of, 90 sociological analysis of, 96–97 Concussion in Sport Guidelines (CISG), 31 Confidentiality, 31 in sports contexts, 31–32 Consent, 155 defence of, 155–156 express, 155–156 Conspiratorial alliances, 26 Constructionism, social, 106 Continuing professional development (CPD) criteria, 25 Controlled athlete, committed, 113–114 Co-presence, in research, 135 Cost-benefit risk analysis, 98–99 Critical discourse analysis (CDA), 106–107, 108–110, 117 CTE. See Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) Cultural factors, 186–187 Cultural influences, 106 Culture physical, 121–122, 129–130 of risk, 25–26 Debilitating cognitive impairments, 90 Defences based on volenti non fit injuria, 155–157 of consent, 155–156 Dementia, 90, 94 Deregulation, professional wrestling, 170–171 Dichotomy, hegemonic/subordinate, 185–186 Disability intellectual, 130–131 mental health and, 129–131 social relational model of, 75–76 studies, 76–78 Discipline, 42 Discourse medical, 106 overarching, 110 performance, 112–113 of personal growth, 114–115 psychological, 106 stories of struggle in, 110–117 Discursive psychology (DP), 108–110 Disordered eating, 106–107, 113–114 female athletes and, 107–108 Dominant ideology, of race and ethnicity, 127 DP. See Discursive psychology (DP) Drinking, excessive, 10–11 ‘Dr No’, 94 Drug, illegal, 10–11 Dunn v University of Ottawa (1995), 153–154 Eating attitudes and behaviors, 106 disorder, 106 Economic deterministic interpretations, 92–93 Elite athlete autobiographies, 110–112 Embodied identities, 75–76 Emergence of medical services, in high-performance sport, 25–27 Emotional turning points, 115 Empowered athlete, in transition, 116–117 Enculturation, 6–7 Endurance sport pain, 58–60 Epistemological uncertainty, 98 Ethical infringements, 31–32 Ethnicity, race and, 127 Ethnographer, 41 Excessive drinking, 10–11 Exercise medicine, 13–14, 29–33 in UK, 27–29 Express consent, 155–156 Face-to-face interactions, 26 Faculty of Sport and Exercise Medicine (FSEM), 27–28 Female athletes and disordered eating, 107–108 elite, 107–108 injury, 96 Feminist disability studies, 77 Feminized food rules, 107–108 FIFA World Cup (2017), 128–129 Figurational sociologists, 9 Flipside Academy, 40, 45 Fluidity of body acceptance, 116 Food control, 113–114 Football, American, 95–96 Gender identities, athletes, 127–128 sexuality and, 127–128 Greyhound racing, 133 Guttman, Ludwig, 73 Hazardous styles of play, 7 Health-related metrics, 187–188 Hegemonic masculinity, 127–128 Hegemonic/subordinate dichotomy, 185–186 Hegemony of neoliberalism, 44–45 ‘Hidden’ concept of suffering in sport, 126–132 High-performance body, 184–185 High-performance sport, emergence of medical services in, 25–27 Hippocratic Oath, 31–32 Home Countries Institutes of Sport (HCIS), 28 Homeless World Cup Foundation, 128–129 Howe, David, 74–75 Human suffering, in sport triangle, 122–126 Hyper-masculine attitudes, 127–128 IABSEM. See Intercollegiate Academic Board of Sport and Exercise Medicine (IABSEM) Ice hockey, 142–143, 146 civil law claims in Canadian, 148–151 Identity, 185–186 gender, 127–128 racial, 125–126 Ideological suffering, 124 Illegal drug, 10–11 Ill-fitting equipment, 80–81 Inequality, social, 132 Infringements, ethical, 31–32 Ingold, 132–136 In-house internal disciplinary measures, 144 In-house punishment, 144 Injury-causing act, 156, 158 Injury surveillance, medicalization of, 94–95 Intactness of athlete, 124–125 Intellectual disability, 130–131 Intentional torts, 144–145 Intercollegiate Academic Board of Sport and Exercise Medicine (IABSEM), 27–28 International Paralympic Committee (IPC), 75, 83 Classification Code, 72, 75 Interpersonal learning, 6–7 Interpretive repertoires, 110 IPC. See International Paralympic Committee (IPC) Irish amateur rugby players, 97, 99–100 Ironman Triathlon World Championship (Hawaii), 56–57, 58–60 community of pain, 66–68 exploration, purpose, and education of pain at (1981-1984), 60–63 Ironman course, 61–63 media, finance, and family (1985-1989), 63–64 pain of identity, experience, expression, and sustainability (1990-1995), 65–66 Irritability, 97 Jones, Leisel, 111–114, 117–118 Joshua, Anthony, 24 Kinesiologists, 13–14 Klitschko, Wladimir, 24 Kumaritashvili, Nodar death, 7–8 sociological autopsy on, 8 Legal liability, 152, 155–156 Legal principles, 142 Legitimation of risk, 25–26 Leighton v Best (2015), 153–154 Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer or questioning (LGTBQ), 127–128 Levita v Crew , 156–157 Liability, 155–156 actions, 142 in contact sport, 153 defeat, 156–157, 158 legal, 152, 155–156 tort, 142, 144, 147, 152 Life threatening condition, 125–126 Martin, Trayvon, 12 Martland, 93–94 ‘punch drunk’ diagnosis, 93 Masculinity, 6–7 hegemonic, 127–128 issues of, 96 to risk-taking, 6–7 Media coverage, 100–101 discourse, 99–100 portrayal of key concussion-related incidents, 100 ‘Medical classification’ system, 74–75 Medical discourses, 106 Medical facilities, paralympic games in, 73 Medicalization, of injury surveillance, 94–95 Medical treatment, of concussion, 98 Medicine, exercise, 13–14, 29–33 in UK, 27–29 Mental health and disability, 129–131 Mental illness, risk of, 12–13 Michaud v Tardif , 156–157 Midnight basketball, 12–13, 128–129 Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Committee, 92, 94 Mixed martial arts (MMA) community, 122–123, 124–125 Mood swings, 97 Munich Olympics, 61 Muscle soreness, 179–180 Narrative inquiry, 107 National Centre for Sport and Exercise Medicine (NCSEM), 28–29 National Paralympic Committees, 73–74 Nature-based sports, 131–132 NCAA ice hockey, 91–92 NCSEM. See National Centre for Sport and Exercise Medicine (NCSEM) Negative attitudes, 130–131 Negligence, 142, 145 ice hockey, 146 liability based on, 153 reasonable person test in, 146–147 unintentional tort of, 146 Negotiated risk, 44 Neoliberalism, hegemony of, 44–45 Neoliberal times, accounting for peril in, 43–44 NFL, 94 mild traumatic brain injury committee, 94 players, 92, 100–101 pre-eminence of, 95 Nixon, Howard L., 26 Non-participation, risk of, 13–14 Non-traumatic injury, 121–122 Olympic Games, in Mexico (1968), 12 Olympic sports, clinicians of, 30–31 Overarching discourses, 110 Over body, lack of autonomy, 183–184 Pain depersonalization, 94–95 Pain neutralization, 94–95 Paralympic competition, 72 Paralympic games, in medical facilities, 73 Paralympic identities disability studies, risk-taking and, 76–78 Paralympic Military Program (PMP), 74 Paralympic Movement, 72, 74–75, 76, 80, 84 Paralympic pathways, beginning and ending sport careers, 78–82 Paralympic sport, 72 injured and classifying impairment in, 72–76 Para-sport athletes, 130 Parkour, 41, 42 pop-culture sensationalism of, 40 risk and safety in, 45–49 Participant liability, 154 actions, 142 PCS. See Physical Cultural Studies (PCS) Performance discourse, 112–113 Performance narratives, 187 Performance sports, 9 Personal growth, discourse of, 114–115 Phenomenology, 67, 68 Physical Cultural Studies (PCS), 122–123, 126–127 Physical culture, 121–122, 129–130 capital, 14 Physical literacy, 13–14 Physiotherapists, 32–33 Physiotherapy, 28 Plastic eating, 32–33 Play, hazardous styles of, 7 Pleasurable risk, 14 PMP. See Paralympic Military Program (PMP) Pop-culture sensationalism of parkour, 40 Popularism of pain, 56–57, 59–60, 63, 65, 66–67, 68–69 Positive deviance, 25–26 Post-injury consequences, 97 Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), 124, 132–133 PPC. See Public Protection Cabinet (PPC) Professional athletes, suicides of, 11–12 Professional wrestling, 164–166 increasingly painful, injurious and harmful business of, 167–170 regulating and deregulating, 170–171 researching the regulation of, 171–173 short and contemporary history of (1982-2018), 166–167 work-related harms of, 164 Provincial interpretation, 142 Psycho-educational opportunity, 189–190 Psychological discourses, 106 Psychology, discursive, 108–110 Psycho-social approach, 107 PTSD. See Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Public Protection Cabinet (PPC), 174 ‘Punch drunk’ diagnosis, 93 Race and ethnicity, 127 Racial identity, 125–126 Racing, greyhound, 133 Rationalization of sport, 27–29 Rationalized model of sport, limits of implementing, 29–33 Rationalized policy, enactment of, 31–32 Recklessness, 155 Red Tape reduction, 174 Red Tape Reduction initiative, 175 Regulation professional wrestling, 170–171 self-body, 113–114 Re-interpreting the body as fragile, 183 Relational risk, conceptually understanding, 15–18 Relational suffering, 135–136 Religion, 131–132 Research in the Sociology of Sport , 1, 2 Retirement from sport, 181, 182–183 Rio Olympic games, 127 Rio Paralympic Games (2016), 73–74 Risk, 7, 180–181 legitimation of, 25–26 pleasurable, 14 rites of, 45–46 sociologists of, 8–9 See also specific types of risk Risk and safety in parkour, 45–49 rites of risk, 45–46 rituals of symbolic safety, 46–49 Risk culture, 9–11, 15–16 Risk society, 8, 44 Risk sport, 6, 9 Risk-taking, 6–7, 17–18 amplified, 9–10 behavior, 180–181 dangerous, 10–11 ecstatic pleasure of, 181 masculinity to, 6–7 and paralympic identities, 76–78 voluntary, 42–45 Risky enterprises in sport, 9–15 pleasurable risk, 14 at risk and salvation, 12–13 risk culture, 9–11 risk of non-participation, 13–14 risk of social loss, 11–12 risk of victimization, 11 sport-related risk, 15 Rites of risk, 45–46 Rituals of symbolic safety, 46–49 Royal Society of Medicine (RSM), 27–28 RSM. See Royal Society of Medicine (RSM) Rugby players, 97–98 Rule-violating behaviour, 155–156 SATs. See Student athletic trainers (SATs) Second impact syndrome, 90 Self-alienation, 9–10 Self-body regulation, 113–114 Self-identities, 108–109 Self-inflicted bleeding, 173 Self-objectification, 9–10 Self-regulation, 112–113 SEM. See Sport and Exercise Medicine (SEM) Sense of control, 187 Sex testing, 127–128 Sexuality and gender, 127–128 Shorter, Frank, 61 Sleep disturbance, 97 “Slim to win” culture, 108, 114 Smith, Tommie, 12 Social constructionism, 106 Social inequality, 132 Social influences, 106 Social issue, rise of, 91–96 Socialization, sociological frames of, 6–7 Social loss, risk of, 11–12 Social problems, 122, 126–132 hidden concept of suffering in sport, 126–132 Social relational model of disability, 75–76 Socio-cultural process, 126 Sociological analysis, of concussion, 96–97 Sociological interpretation, standard, 10–11 Sociologists of risk, 8–9 Sociologists of sport, 24–25 Sociology of sport, 8 perspectives from, 25–27 Specialism, 33–34 Specialist Training in Sport and Exercise Medicine, 27–28 Special Olympics, 130–131 Sport and Exercise Medicine (SEM), 27–28, 29–30, 32–33 establishment of, 33 Sport careers, paralympic pathways and beginning and ending, 78–82 Sport Ethic, 6, 9–10, 96–97 Sport for development and peace (SDP) movement, 12–13 Sporting Bodies, Damaged Selves: Sociological Studies of Sports-related Injury , 1, 73–74 Sporting risk, 9–11 Sporting transitions, 182–183 Sport pain, endurance, 58–60 Sport-related violence, 15–16 Sports fans, 7 Sports medicine, 25, 26–27, 33–34 clinicians, 32–33 services, 27 Sportsnets, 6 Sports-related concussion (SRC), 31 relative invisibility of, 95 Sports science, 26–27 Sports violence, 143–144 Sport triangle, human suffering in, 122–126 SRC. See Sports-related concussion (SRC) Standard of care, 142, 146–147, 152–153, 154, 155, 157–158 Standard sociological interpretation, 10–11 State Athletic Commissions, 164, 172–173 Stoke Mandeville Games, 73 Student athletic trainers (SATs), 26 Suffering body, 134–135 relational, 135–136 in sport, ‘Hidden’ concept, 126–132 through connection, 135 Suicides, 125–126 of professional athletes, 11–12 Surveillance, body-related, 114 Swimming culture, Australia, 108 Symbolic violence, 123–124 TBI. See Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI) Temporarily able-bodied (TAB), 75–76 Tort intentional, 144–145 liability, 142, 144, 147, 152 principles, 142 unintentional, 146–147 Tort law, 142–147 Canadian, claims and defences under, 147 Traceurs, 43 Transitions assistance programs, 188 empowered athlete in, 116–117 sporting, 182–183 Trauma-related amputations, 76–77 Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI), 169 Traumatic injury, 121–122 UK, exercise medicine in, 27–29 UK Sports Institute (UKSI), 28 Uncertainty epistemological, 98 forms of, 98 Unintentional torts, 146–147 Unruh (Guardian of) v Webber (1994), 152–153, 154 Velocity brain shaking, 90 Victimization, risk of, 11 Violence, 123–124, 143–144 sport-related, 15–16 symbolic, 123–124 Vocabulary of motive, 42–45, 50–51 Volenti defence, 142 Volenti non fit injuria, 142 defences based on, 155–157 Voluntary risk-taking, 42–45 Wilkinson, Ian, 124–125 Winter Olympic Games 2010 (Vancouver), 7–8 Winter Olympic Games (2018), 127–128 World Report on Disability, 76–77 World Rugby Medical Commission Conference, 91 World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF), 169 World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), 164, 174–175 acting with immunity and impunity, 164–166 World Wrestling Federation (WWF), 165, 169 The Wounded Storyteller (1995) (Frank), 78 Wrestling Scribe, 170–171 WWE. See World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) WWF. See World Wrestling Federation (WWF) WWWF. See World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF) Zapf v Muckalt (1996), 153–154 Book Chapters Prelims Introduction Chapter 1 Sport and Risk Culture Chapter 2 The Rationalization of HealthCare in Modern Sport: From Policy to Practice Chapter 3 Risk in Lifestyle Sports: The Case of Parkour Chapter 4 An Enduring Event: 20 Years of One Athlete’s Negotiation with Pain at the Ironman Triathlon World Championships Chapter 5 Injury, Pain and Risk in the Paralympic Movement Chapter 6 Sports-related Brain Injury: Concussion and Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy Chapter 7 Going Public with Pain: Athlete Stories of Disordered Eating in Discourse Chapter 8 Suffering in Sport Chapter 9 Complexities in Canadian Legal Approaches to Sports Injury Chapter 10 Regulating the Harmful, Injurious and Risky Business of Professional Wrestling Chapter 11 When the Athletic Body Fades: Sporting Exit and Identity Transitions Index
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