Athlete Identity

2080 Words5 Pages

The definition of an athlete is a person who is proficient in sports and other forms of physical exercise, but today’s athlete is much bigger than this definition. Today’s athlete sets trends that are bigger than the sport they play. Today’s athlete is not only proficient in sports, but also public entertainment. Today’s athlete is competing not just for a win, but for an identity as something more than an athlete. No matter the sport, every game, match, or competition athletes compete in is one step to them gaining full citizenship. Being a citizen is much more than being a part of the United States, being a citizen is having a voice in a world that silences you. Being a citizen is having an identity that makes you a human and not just an …show more content…

In this paper, I will discuss the intricate relationship between lines and the nation, sports, and athlete as a citizen, gaining evidence from figure skating, women’s professional tennis, and U.S college …show more content…

The sports world was built on the idea of staying in the lines. In fact, most sports contain line and if an athlete ventures out of them they become out of bounds and are penalized. These lines represent more than just guidelines for sports. It represents an oppressive system set forth to keep athletes from straying too far off path and creating an identity. For skating, the jumps are the lines that are tightly scrutinized and if the line is not perfect there is a problem. Using Nancy Kerrigan as an example, every time she completed a loop jump, she would extend her non-landing leg and create three perfect lines: one directing attention to the sky, one directing attention to the ice, and one directing attention to the viewer. Her lines always stayed in bounds and because of this she was praised and rewarded. In contrast, Tonya Harding and Surya Bonaly, both phenomenal athletes in their own right, were constantly nitpicked for going out of the lines. In fact, both were well known for their famous nonlinear techniques, triple axel (Harding) and back flip (Bonaly). The rules of perfection had been set in the figure skating world. Harding and Bonaly were breaking the rules. They were garnering attention that the figure skating world reserved for their ice princesses. Bonaly was not an ice princess and Harding was definitely not an ice

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