Fighting Sports, Gender, and the Commodification of Violence

Fighting Sports, Gender, and the Commodification of Violence

  • Victoria E. Collins
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing USAISBN 13: 9781978799820ISBN 10: 1978799829

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Know about the book -

Fighting Sports, Gender, and the Commodification of Violence is written by Victoria E. Collins and published by Bloomsbury Publishing USA. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1978799829 (ISBN 10) and 9781978799820 (ISBN 13).

Fighting Sports, Gender and the Commodification of Violence: Heavy Bag Heroines offers a glimpse into the cultural terrain of women’s boxing as it manifests in everyday gyms for novice boxers. Taking an ethnographic approach, Victoria E. Collins examines broad understandings of gender, violence, self-defense, commodification, and health and fitness from the point of view of women who engage the sport. Collins unpacks dominant assumptions about gender and the sport through her participants’ understandings of gender norms, social assumptions about physicality, sexuality, as well as challenges to masculine and feminine performativity. Central to this study is the appropriation and marketing of the boxers’ work out in cardio-boxing gym spaces (i.e., fitness boxing), where the sport has increasingly been packaged, commodified, and sold to predominantly middle class, white female consumers as a means to not only improve their health and fitness, but also to defend themselves against a would-be attacker. The body project for women in the sport of boxing, therefore, should not only be framed as a form of resistance, but one of physical feminism.