ABSTRACT

For elite athletes, pain and injury are normal. In a challenge to the orthodox medical model, this book makes it clear that pain and injury cannot be understood in terms of physiology alone, and examines the influence of social and cultural processes on how athletes experience pain and injury. It raises a series of key social and ethical questions about the culture of 'playing hurt', the role of coaches and medical staff, the deliberate infliction of pain in sport, and the use of drugs.

This book begins by providing three different perspectives on the topic of pain and injury in sport, and goes on to discuss:

* pain, injury and performance
* the deliberate infliction of pain and injury
* the management of pain and injury
* the meaning of pain and injury.

 

 

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Pain and Injury in Sport

section |47 pages

Section I: Pain and Injury in Sports: Three Overviews

section |43 pages

Section II: Pain, Injury and Performance

chapter |12 pages

Pains and Strains on the Ice

Some Thoughts on the Physical and Mental Struggles of Polar Adventurers

chapter |17 pages

Injured Female Athletes

Experiential Accounts from England and Canada

section |55 pages

Section III: The Deliberate Infliction of Pain and Injury

chapter |17 pages

Sport and the Systematic Infliction of Pain

A Case Study of State-Sponsored Mandatory Doping in East Germany

chapter |16 pages

Pain and Injury in Boxing

The Medical Profession Divided

chapter |18 pages

The Intentional Infliction of Pain in Sport

Ethical Perspectives

section |62 pages

The Management of Pain and Injury

section |33 pages

The Meaning of Pain and Injury

chapter |16 pages

Suffering in and for Sport

Some Philosophical Remarks on a Painful Emotion