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“Having an unfair advantage” vs “playing by the rules”: media discourses of trans women’s participation in the Olympics

“Having an unfair advantage” vs “playing by the rules”: media discourses of trans women’s participation in the Olympics
“Having an unfair advantage” vs “playing by the rules”: media discourses of trans women’s participation in the Olympics
This study reviews UK news media discourses surrounding New Zealand’s weightlifter Laurel Hubbard’s participation in the 2020 Olympics as the first ever publicly open transgender woman to compete at the Olympic Games. Discourse Analysis of 94 news and opinion articles published in the UK press before and after the Olympics, reveals contradictory portrayals of Hubbard as both having an unfair biological advantage and playing by the rules. While these discursive constructions appear contradictory on the surface, both draw on wider cisgenderist discourses to produce and police normative understandings of gender. We argue that sports media is a heightened site for the production of gendered bodies (in sport and in general), contributing to the production of ignorance around trans people, and influencing policy debates around the topic of trans inclusion.
Foucauldian discourse analysis, news media, sport, transgender athletes
1471-5902
Kavoura, Anna
4989d31b-f1d7-411e-a8da-cea68f9bd3f9
Jenzen, Olu
ea2f2c5f-197f-4595-8f38-0548817bf25b
Kavoura, Anna
4989d31b-f1d7-411e-a8da-cea68f9bd3f9
Jenzen, Olu
ea2f2c5f-197f-4595-8f38-0548817bf25b

Kavoura, Anna and Jenzen, Olu (2024) “Having an unfair advantage” vs “playing by the rules”: media discourses of trans women’s participation in the Olympics. Feminist Media Studies. (doi:10.1080/14680777.2024.2395965).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study reviews UK news media discourses surrounding New Zealand’s weightlifter Laurel Hubbard’s participation in the 2020 Olympics as the first ever publicly open transgender woman to compete at the Olympic Games. Discourse Analysis of 94 news and opinion articles published in the UK press before and after the Olympics, reveals contradictory portrayals of Hubbard as both having an unfair biological advantage and playing by the rules. While these discursive constructions appear contradictory on the surface, both draw on wider cisgenderist discourses to produce and police normative understandings of gender. We argue that sports media is a heightened site for the production of gendered bodies (in sport and in general), contributing to the production of ignorance around trans people, and influencing policy debates around the topic of trans inclusion.

Text
FMS Kavoura and Jenzen Authors accepted manuscript - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 8 March 2026.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 19 August 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 September 2024
Keywords: Foucauldian discourse analysis, news media, sport, transgender athletes

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493755
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493755
ISSN: 1471-5902
PURE UUID: fd5c0f75-638d-4e24-bacb-7311fd70c6a0

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 12 Sep 2024 16:36
Last modified: 13 Sep 2024 17:00

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Contributors

Author: Anna Kavoura
Author: Olu Jenzen

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