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Brain Politics: Gendered Difference and Traumatic Brain Injury in Sport

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Henne, Kathryn

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Routledge

Abstract

Media coverage of high-profile lawsuits involving professional sport leagues in North America has helped to raise awareness of the effects of traumatic brain injury (TBI). In response to the popular emphasis on men’s collision sports, this chapter examines gendered contours of concussion and TBI through a focus on how U.S.-based advocates and experts frame them in relation to women, highlighting their implications for understandings of TBI among participants in women’s sports. Specifically, it scrutinizes how efforts to capture and explain women’s experiences of TBI in popular, regulatory, and scientific narratives reveal complications between notions of sex and gender. It considers three domains of work carried out by advocates, clinicians, and researchers, elucidating the politics of sex/gender within each: (1) calls for sport-specific TBI policy and regulation; (2) explanations of sport-related TBI, and (3) scientific knowledge about TBI that informs—and is informed by—sport. The chapter concludes with a reflection on how different articulations of sex/gender operate constitutively in the shaping of concussion in women’s sport and the female athlete as a body. Building upon feminist research concerned with neuroscience and the brain, the analysis unpacks how gendered interpretations of science inform foundational understandings of the concussion crises in sport.

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Sociocultural Examinations of Sports Concussions

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Restricted until

2037-12-31