Do the Paralympic Games empower the disability sport community? Like many other contemporary sporting institutions, the Paralympic Games have made the transition from pastime to spectacle, and the profile of athletes with disabilities has been increased as a result. This book reviews the current status of the Paralympics and challenges the mainstream assumption that the Games are a vehicle for empowerment of the disabled community. Using ethnographic methods unique in this area of study, P. David Howe has undertaken an innovative and critical examination of the social, political and economic processes shaping the Paralympic Movement. In The Cultural Politics of the Paralympic Movement he presents his findings and offers a new insight into the relationship between sport, the body and the culture of disability. In doing so he has produced the most comprehensive and radical text about high performance sport for the disabled yet published. P. David Howe is Lecturer in the Sociology of Sport at Loughborough University. He is also a four-time Paralympian and former Athlete’s Representative to the International Paralympic Committee.
Author(s): David Howe
Edition: 1
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: 208
Book Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Copyright......Page 5
Dedication......Page 6
Contents......Page 8
Illustrations......Page 9
Series editors’ foreword......Page 10
Acknowledgements......Page 12
Abbreviations......Page 13
1 Athlete as anthropologist, anthropologist as athlete......Page 14
Part 1: Sport and disability......Page 26
2 A social history of sport for the disabled......Page 28
3 Paralympic ‘lived history’: Reflections of a participant observer......Page 51
4 The politics of sporting disablement......Page 75
5 Mediated Paralympic culture......Page 95
Part 2: Impairment, sport and performance......Page 112
6 The imperfect body and sport......Page 114
7 Technology and the Paralympic Games......Page 133
8 Accommodating Paralympic bodies......Page 150
Appendix: Through an anthropological lens......Page 166
Notes......Page 178
Bibliography......Page 181
Index......Page 193