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  1. Instrumentalization of the athlete: interpreting Dokic and Agassi via Kafka’s Metamorphosis.Irena Martínková, John Quay & Jim Parry - forthcoming - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy.
    This article discusses one kind of athlete instrumentalization by reinterpreting Kafka’s novella Metamorphosis, in which the main character, Gregor Samsa, may be seen as a victim of family exploitation. We suggest that this story can be taken as a metaphor in the context of sport—of a ‘tennis mom’ or a ‘football dad’, who comes to see their child in instrumental terms. In a highly competitive sporting environment, instrumentalization has a direct impact on the young athlete, whose sporting encounter is profoundly (...)
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  • ‘The hand of God’: hierophany and transcendence through sport.Ivo Jirásek - 2024 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 51 (1):1-28.
    The designation of Diego Maradona’s ‘handball’ goal, that it was an intervention by God himself, brings the phenomena of sport and religion into an interrelationship. The basic thesis of this paper is that, despite many of their phenomenal similarities, explicit religion is not, and cannot be, substantially related to sport, as the two manifest themselves in different ways of being. This thesis is supported by arguments from three philosophical areas: 1. The ontological dimension of the manifestation of the sacred in (...)
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  • Phenomenal similarities and phenomenological differences between religion and sport.Ivo Jirásek - forthcoming - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy:1-16.
    Sport as the pursuit of competition and the achievement of ever greater records goes beyond the dimension of mere physical activity and has many similarities not only with play, drama and art, but also with religion. Symbolic representations of sporting activity are then interpreted in religious terms, e.g. that sport has the power to create a new kind of religion, that sporting and religious experiences are identical, that a specific sporting sacred can be defined. The paper accepts the position that (...)
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