Abstract
Throughout one’s career, a professional sports practitioner is
confronted with various choices to make, ranging from coaching a fair
match or offering opportunities for selected individuals to win; showing
true sportsmanship or venturing for a better compensation; to even
sticking to one’s home team or accepting a better offer. This is faced by
all sports practitioners within the same industry: athletes, coaches,
managers, and even team owners. In making these choices, individuals
recognize essential ethical considerations. However, a primary factor that
influences them—albeit without them knowing—is their alienated state.
The preferences of the sports practitioner mirror society’s response to the
demands of the Culture Industry. He or she would opt to choose what the
Industry is offering and uphold these standards. After all, sports is a social
phenomenon that has undergone changes throughout the years, along with
other aspects of society. It bears the impact of the Aufklärung, the true
question of being enlightened and of being cultured. Thus, sports could
be seen as constituting another level in the individual’s (and even
society’s) alienated sphere.
This paper seeks to shed light on the ethical considerations of the sports
practitioner, in particular the heavy influence of the Culture Industry, the
individual’s alienated state, and his or her response. I am interested in the
play of power-relations among the sports practitioners and society, both
dominated by the Industry. The paper does not present an exhaustive claim
enlisting all considerations, but merely critiques the present setup. By
presenting individuals’ (ultimately social) alienated state, I show that their
choices are in fact social, even though they would seem to be solely
individualistic in terms of their situated-ness in sporting events. Thus, this
paper shows the heavy influence of the Industry in the continuous power
relations between sports practitioners and society, as well as the alienated
state of both.