women, sport, and exercise in the 19th century. masculinity: the images, ideas, and symbols...
TRANSCRIPT
Women, Sport, and Exercise in the 19th Century
• MASCULINITY: the images, ideas, and symbols traditionally defined as belonging to the male sex.
• FEMININITY: the images, ideas, and symbols traditionally defined as belonging to the female sex.
• Kingston Gazette April 28, 1812 “…an exercise which allowably beneficial to
the health when practiced in the proper place, loses that merit when a delicate girl mounts a lofty and dangerous swing just after leaving a warm tea room, and at that hour of all others when the chilly dew is most prejudicial to even a strong constitution.”
British Medical Journal 1867
• “As a body who practise among women, we have constituted ourselves, as it were the guardians of their interests, and – in many cases – the custodians of their honour. We are, in fact, the stronger and they the weaker. They are obliged to believe all that we tell them and we, therefore, may be said to have them at our mercy.”
Class, religion, fashion, and medicine
Fashion
Frederick Barnjum – Montreal• What shall we say of girls who, by the conventional rules
of society, are debarred from taking more than the semblance of exercise. They have not the same opportunity for romping as boys. Poor little missie must walk home in the most genteel manner possible, perhaps indulging in a softened laugh with some companion – her arms carefully hugged to her sides, motion of the lower extremities only being permitted , added to which her poor little body is in all probability forced in by one of those instruments of death called corsets, binding up the naughty muscles that are begging and praying to be let loose and have an opportunity of strengthening themselves, and the young lady is considered to be in a highly satisfactory condition if she is pale and weak; but no matter, it is the natural thing for girls to be weak…I do not hesitate to say that any young lady placed under the care of an intelligent, well-educated teacher, cannot fail to attain a degree of health which otherwise she never would have dreamed of.
Indian Clubs
The Bicycle
Anti-masturbation rhetoric
Pierre de Coubertin 1912
““We feel that the Olympic Games must We feel that the Olympic Games must be reserved for men…We must be reserved for men…We must continue to try to achieve the following continue to try to achieve the following definition: the solemn and periodic definition: the solemn and periodic exaltation of male athleticism with exaltation of male athleticism with internationalism as its base, loyalty as internationalism as its base, loyalty as a means, art for its setting, and female a means, art for its setting, and female applause as reward”applause as reward”
The Matchless Six: Bell, Smith, Cook, Rosenfeld, Thompson, Catherwood
Canadian women-- “Matchless Six”:
2 Gold, 1 Silver, and 1 Bronze
The Canadian women’s team leaving for Amsterdam
L-R: Bell, Cook, Smith,Rosenfeld
TorontoWorld1924
Bobbie RosenfeldBobbie Rosenfeld
1966
http://www.jwa.org/exhibits/rosenfeld/deedfm.htm
1950—Canada’s Female Athlete of the Half-Century
Bobbie RosenfeldFeminine Sports ReelGlobe & Mail( 1938-59 )
Alexandrine Gibb in Toronto Daily Star, “No Man’s Land of Sports” (1928-40)
Phyllis Griffithsin Toronto Telegram, “The Girland the Game” (1928-42)
Montreal Daily Star 1929 - 1969
1.6 metersnot beatenby a Cdntil 1954
Ethel Catherwood
“Saskatoon Lily”
Maxwell Stiles - Los Angeles Examiner(1932)
“The Canadian girls are undoubtedly the prettiest and most wholesome looking group of girls who
have arrived for the competition. They constitute a denial of the general idea that a woman athlete
must be built like a baby grand piano and have a face like a hatchet. Their ages range from 16 to 21, and they are here to show the world that Canada has some splendid young women who are good-
looking and who know how to conduct themselves.”
Avery Brundage (IOC President 1952-1972)
“I think women’s events should be confined to those appropriate for women - swimming, tennis, figure skating, and fencing, but certainly not shot-putting”
Edmonton Commercial Graduates Basketball Team
1915 - 1940
• Coach, manager, promoter Percy Page
• Feeder system – juniors, boys• Regional, national, international• A traveling women’s team
1915
1932
1940
Shooting Stars
National Film Board of Canada
(1993)