ABSTRACT

Media Sport Stars considers how masculinity and male identity are represented through images of sport and sport stars. From the pre-radio era to today's specialist TV channels, newspaper supplements and websites, Whannel traces the growing cultural importance of sport and sportmen, showing how the very practices of sport are still bound up with the production of masculinities.
Through a series of case studies of British and American sportsmen, Whannel traces the emergence of of the sporting 'hero' and 'star' , and considers the ways in which the lives of sport stars are narrated through the media. Focusing on figures like Muhammad Ali and David Beckham, whose fame has spread well beyond the world of sport, he shows how growing media coverage has helped produced a sporting system, and examines how modern celebrity addresses the issues of race and nation, performance and identity, morality and violence.
From Babe Ruth to Mike Tyson, Media Sport Stars demonstrates that, in an era in which both morality and masculinity are percieved to be 'in crisis', sport holds a central place in contemporary culture, and sport stars become the focal point for discourses of masculinity and morality.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part |64 pages

The tales they tell of men …

chapter |12 pages

Heroes and stars

chapter |12 pages

Narrativity and biography

chapter |15 pages

Sporting masculinities

part |64 pages

From sporting print to satellite …

chapter |13 pages

The birth of the sport star

Pre-war fame

chapter |15 pages

Good boys

Stars, nations and respectability in the 1950s

chapter |14 pages

Bad boys and the work ethic

part |1 pages

The restless vortex of celebrity

chapter |17 pages

Identities

‘Race', nation and masculinities

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion

So what if the poxy swan is the wrong way?