Approaching the gendered phenomenon of women warriors

Abstract

Our initial motivation for producing Global Perspectives on Women in Combat Sports: Women Warriors around the World began several years ago when, as PhD candidates studying together at Loughborough University in the UK, Dr. Alex Channon and I developed a shared interest in combat sports through our separate but related research projects. My work – involving an ethnographic study of a working-class, predominantly male boxing club – and Alex’s – which explored the phenomenon of mixed-sex training in a range of martial arts schools – fuelled many discussions between us on the sociological richness of these activities.

Topics such as the contentious definition of ‘violence’, the emotional landscape of training to fight, the social class characteristics of participants in different clubs and schools, and the complex relationship between ethnicity and authenticity in the martial arts occupied many of our debates. However, the most salient issue for both of us, and one that we returned to with the greatest regularity, was the manner in which gender was constructed, portrayed and lived out within these activities.

 

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The tyranny of the male preserve

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The appropriation of hegemonic masculinity theory