6533b85bfe1ef96bd12bb2d4
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Emancipation Through Sports: Doctors and the Rise of the Female Body in Finlandc.1900–1920
Anssi Halmesvirtasubject
HistoryCultural historyEmancipationParliamentmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationSuffrageHuman bodyhumanitiesPhysical educationNationalismSociologySocial sciencehuman activitiesSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Pacemedia_commondescription
While the cultural history of body and sports have become well-established fields of historical studies since the 1980s, it has been demonstrated that medical practice has functioned as a moral discourse which produces a regulation of the female body. It has been realised that theories (e.g. of ‘degeneration’) concerning the functioning of the human body bore a great significance to planning and defining the programmes of physical education, gymnastics and sports in the spirit of muscular nationalism. Doctors studying human physiology and training were eager to control not only the female body but also the mind of a gymnast or a sportswoman. This is what happened also in Finland from the late nineteenth century, when the emancipation of women started there. In pace with the demands of educational opportunities and suffrage – gained in 1906 with the establishment of the Finnish one-chamber Parliament – women started to yearn for their own kind of physical exercise, to organise in gymnastic clubs and finall...
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-02-01 | The International Journal of the History of Sport |