ABSTRACT

After the young South African athlete Caster Semenya won the 800m title at the 2009 World Championships she was obliged to undergo gender testing and was temporarily withdrawn from international competition. The way that this controversy unfolded represents a rich and multi-layered example of the construction of gender in wider society and the interrelationships between sport, culture and the media. This is the first book to explore the case in depth, from socio-cultural, ethical and legal perspectives.

Analysing what came to be called "the Caster Semenya Case" in a comprehensive and multi-disciplinary fashion, and covering issues from media discourses and the rhetoric and regulations of the sport’s governing bodies to the reaction of the athlete herself, the book explores the ethics of how gender norms in sport, and in society more generally, are constructed through appearance, behaviour and sporting performance. This 2009 controversy can be taken as an indicator of the tensions of the time, and served as a link between medical sciences, society and gender.

Including discussions of key concepts such as 'intersex', 'body norms', and 'fairness', Gender Testing in Sport is fascinating and important reading for anybody with an interest in sport studies, gender studies or biomedical ethics.

chapter 1|14 pages

From Apartheid to segregation in sports

The transgressive body of Caster Mokgadi 1 Semenya

chapter 2|19 pages

Gender verifications vs. anti-doping policies

Sexed controls 1 Semenya

chapter 4|29 pages

Categorizing and attributing the sex of individuals

History of the science, law and ethics

chapter 5|12 pages

From the implicit to aporia

The specificities of the Caster Semenya case as a “discursive moment”

chapter 6|17 pages

Caster Semenya and the intersex hypothesis

On gender as the visual evidence of sex 1

chapter 8|18 pages

“Caster Semenya – the ancients would have called her god”

The international re-imagining and remaking of sex and the art of silence

chapter 9|13 pages

Gender, silence, and a queer new world

Caster Semenya and unfixed ambiguity

chapter |9 pages

Afterword