2009
DOI: 10.1080/15295030903176641
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Yearning for a Past that Never Was: Baseball, Steroids, and the Anxiety of the American Dream

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Cited by 23 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…(40 year old, male, Player, Coach, Official/Referee, Club volunteer, Parent, Spectator)Other comments made reference to the lack of an earlier understanding of concussion in rugby union and the need for greater education on the risks involved in playing. However, while these comments can be seen as indicative of a shift away from a hegemonic masculinity-influenced acceptance of pain and injury in sport (Cranmer & Sanderson, 2018), they also created a nostalgic view of rugby union that participants saw as more idyllic than the “modern game.” Nostalgic sentiments are significant as they can serve as unifying narratives that mask tensions that arise from crises, as Von Burg and Johnson (2009) detail in their analysis of discourses associated with steroids scandals in American baseball. In this context, nostalgia serves to defend the shift from hegemonic masculinity and “protects” rugby union by scapegoating processes of modernisation in the sport.…”
Section: Discussion Of Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(40 year old, male, Player, Coach, Official/Referee, Club volunteer, Parent, Spectator)Other comments made reference to the lack of an earlier understanding of concussion in rugby union and the need for greater education on the risks involved in playing. However, while these comments can be seen as indicative of a shift away from a hegemonic masculinity-influenced acceptance of pain and injury in sport (Cranmer & Sanderson, 2018), they also created a nostalgic view of rugby union that participants saw as more idyllic than the “modern game.” Nostalgic sentiments are significant as they can serve as unifying narratives that mask tensions that arise from crises, as Von Burg and Johnson (2009) detail in their analysis of discourses associated with steroids scandals in American baseball. In this context, nostalgia serves to defend the shift from hegemonic masculinity and “protects” rugby union by scapegoating processes of modernisation in the sport.…”
Section: Discussion Of Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent years, studies of public memory have become a dynamic area for scholars in a variety of disciplines from communication studies to history, political science, and sociology (Dickinson, Blair, & Ott, ; Kitch, ; Nora, ; Phillips, ; Schudson, ; Von Burg & Johnson, ). More recently, scholars from sport and media studies have extended examinations of public memory to the realm of sport and culture (Butterworth, ; Gong, ).…”
Section: Theory and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Steroids have, over time, become viewed as illegitimate in policymaking and media spheres regardless of the conditions of their ingestion, even if the extent of use among players remains unclear and even if public concern about steroids in football is less intense than it is about the place of these substances in professional baseball. Within and across contexts, legitimacy and illegitimacy are always subject to racialization, an observation most clearly illustrated in the treatment of racialized baseball players such as Barry Bonds and Sammy Sosa whose use has been viewed far more critically than that of white players such as Roger Clemens or Mark McGwire (Butterworth, 2007;Von Burg and Johnson, 2009;and Ventresca, 2011).…”
Section: Racial Materializations: Nfl Policy Media Panic and The Wamentioning
confidence: 97%