This paper documents how I fought for a place as a boxer in a regional Tasmanian boxing gym over a 30 month period. This work builds on existing ethnographic accounts that argue that, for women, becoming a boxer is more than just a matter of developing a fit body and physical skill – it is a continual project of negotiating gendered identity. Using an analytic autoethnographic methodology and drawing on contemporary theories of masculinity, I share my individual experiences as a boxer and, in turn, reveal the complexities of bodywork and gendered identity within Tasmanian amateur boxing culture. My closing discussion analyses the way in which performances of masculinity were precarious, fragmented and anxious.
History
Publication title
International Review for The Sociology of Sport
Volume
52
Issue
6
Pagination
734-750
ISSN
1461-7218
Department/School
School of Social Sciences
Publisher
Sage Publicatiosn Ltd.
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Rights statement
Copyright 2015 The Author
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Recreation and leisure activities (excl. sport and exercise)