Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2161073156> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 68 of
68
with 100 items per page.
- W2161073156 abstract "Synopsis-Diverging feminist perspectives are examined in the scholarly literature on women and sports. One perspective aims at dispelling myths about women being athletically inferior to men. Another perspective emphasizes the benefits of athletic competition for women, claiming that female athletes maintain their feminine attributes while acquiring healthy, traditionally male behaviors and attitudes that enhance their self-concept. A third perspective focuses on the defects of male-constructed athletics, and it calls for a new, more feminine approach to sports that elevates cooperation and community over competition. Western feminism today is not the clear-cut feminism of the late 1960s and early 1970s. While there have always been splinter groups within the Western feminist tradition, mainstream feminism of 20 years ago was clearly characterized by a desire to prove that women are equal to men. The Western feminist of 1970 was infused with a righteous fire, a fire fueled by anger against discrimination. That fire was focused on discrediting the disparaging, demeaning, and unfounded belief that women are necessarily inferior to men in the ways of the world. Thus, in order to gain equality, feminists emphasized the similarity of women and men. Today, Western feminism does not seem to be as certain of its goals. Feminists are divided on whether to emphasize similarity or focus on differences. They fear that in achieving the status and power traditionally held by men, they may lose the qualities that they value, such as a sense of interconnectedness and empathy. Feminists look at the world and think, “What a hash men have made of this. Do we really want to be like men if this is what men do?” So, feminists have begun to emphasize their differences from men, and they have decided that those differences may be the salvation of the world. Feminist scholars are providing theory and research which suggest that women really do construct their worlds in a uniquely feminine way. Furthermore, there is a hint of moral superiority in this theory and research, so that" @default.
- W2161073156 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2161073156 creator A5080307761 @default.
- W2161073156 date "1990-01-01" @default.
- W2161073156 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W2161073156 title "Feminist issues in sport" @default.
- W2161073156 cites W1489866769 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W1495809587 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W1515655280 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W1518726733 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W155499563 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W1583512381 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2007442510 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W20179392 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2061016725 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2085397840 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2088662043 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2092164363 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2094318992 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2099312887 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2142738307 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2156434026 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2171294503 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2253525089 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2261078885 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2272809257 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2325611454 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2335917251 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2341761609 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W2776804943 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W575433517 @default.
- W2161073156 cites W75797926 @default.
- W2161073156 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/0277-5395(90)90101-3" @default.
- W2161073156 hasPublicationYear "1990" @default.
- W2161073156 type Work @default.
- W2161073156 sameAs 2161073156 @default.
- W2161073156 citedByCount "6" @default.
- W2161073156 countsByYear W21610731562012 @default.
- W2161073156 countsByYear W21610731562014 @default.
- W2161073156 countsByYear W21610731562015 @default.
- W2161073156 countsByYear W21610731562021 @default.
- W2161073156 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2161073156 hasAuthorship W2161073156A5080307761 @default.
- W2161073156 hasBestOaLocation W21610731562 @default.
- W2161073156 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2161073156 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2161073156 hasConcept C29595303 @default.
- W2161073156 hasConceptScore W2161073156C144024400 @default.
- W2161073156 hasConceptScore W2161073156C17744445 @default.
- W2161073156 hasConceptScore W2161073156C29595303 @default.
- W2161073156 hasLocation W21610731561 @default.
- W2161073156 hasLocation W21610731562 @default.
- W2161073156 hasOpenAccess W2161073156 @default.
- W2161073156 hasPrimaryLocation W21610731561 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W1984966162 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W2023163743 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W2061092978 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W2094617336 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W2509568666 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W2513248937 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W3208903432 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W4229449464 @default.
- W2161073156 hasRelatedWork W587765922 @default.
- W2161073156 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2161073156 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2161073156 magId "2161073156" @default.
- W2161073156 workType "article" @default.