Ethics, cases and controversies
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Köp båda 2 för 900 kr"The result of a multidisciplinary, international workshop, this volume, edited by Montaola (communication studies, Univ. of Rennes 1, France) and Olivesi (communication and media studies, Univ. Claude Bernard Lyon, France) includes nine chapters that focus on the complex case of South African runner Caster Semenya, whom officials forced to undergo gender testing after winning the 800m title at the 2009 World Championships. This collection covers the sociocultural, historical, medical, ethical, and legal contexts surrounding this particular incident. The first four chapters explore various approaches to how norms and definitions about the female body have been constructed and the resulting impact, particularly within sport. An especially strong argument here involves the historical and social legitimization of issues of fairness. The remaining five chapters focus on how these sex and gender norms appear in global media discourses and coverage. A weakness, however, is that some chapters seem only tangentially related to the Semenya caseinspired by, rather than based on. Arguably more about gender construction than gender testing, this edited collection makes a solid contribution to scholarship in several areas of study by approaching one incident from a variety of academic disciplines. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through researchers and faculty." A. Curtis, Lake Erie College - CHOICE "The collection as a whole emphasizes the construction, cultural significance, and meaning of gender more than the ethics of gender testing in sport, but it offers fresh, convincing, and astute perspectives on gender testing. Two chapters, by Elaine Salo and John Sloop, address Semenyas use of silence in response to the intense public scrutiny she faced and continued to receive. Both chapters are theoretically strong, engaging, and bring new perspectives to the body of literature addressing sex/gender testing in sport." Sarah Teetzel, Faculty of Kinesiology and Recreation Management, University of Manitoba
Sandy Montaola is Senior Lecturer in Communication Studies at the University of Rennes 1 (Centre for Research on Political Action in Europe) and supervisor of a journalism degree (IUT, Lannion, France). She has a special interest in the connection between medicine, gender and media coverage from social representation to the ir impact in the public arena. She currently works on two projects about the media coverage of scientists' discourse and bodily norms (especially in intersex and childbirth), and the place of journalists in the representation of diversity Aurlie Olivesi is a Senior Lecturer in Communication and Media Studies at Universit Claude Bernard Lyon 1. Her research fields are the analysis of media discourse (in printed press and internet forums) and the study of how gender in the political field is represented in the media. She has published a monograph about the 2007 French presidential election: Implicitement Sexiste? Genre, politique et discours journalistique. She has a special interest in the representation of gender perturbation in the media, and in the lay discourse about gender issues published in the media
1. From Apartheid to Segregation in Sports: the transgressive body of Caster Mokgadi Semenya 2. Gender Verifications vs. Anti-Doping Policies: sexed controls 3. Unfair Advantage and the Myth of the Level Playing Field in IAAF and IOC Policies on Hyperandrogenism: when is it fair to be a woman? 4. Categorizing and Attributing the Sex of Individuals: history of the science, law and ethics 5. Caster Semenya and the Intersex Hypothesis: on gender as the visual evidence of sex 6. From the Implicit to Aporia: the specificities of the Caster Semenya case as a "discursive moment" 7. From Sports to Science, Rhetorical and Power Issues in the Media Coverage of Caster Semenya 8. "Caster Semenya - the ncients would have called her god." The International Re-Imagining and Remaking of Sex and the Art of Silence 9. Gender, Silence, and a Queer New World: Caster Semenya and unfixed ambiguity 10. Afterword