BEGINNING OF FEMALE COMPETITIVE SWIMMING: FROM “ELEGANCE RACE” TO LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC GAMES

Authors

  • Fabiano Pries Devide Universidade Federal Fluminense
  • Sebastião Josué Votre Universidade Gama Filho

Keywords:

History, sport, swimming, women.

Abstract

The objective of this study is to construct the historical narrative of the appearance of swimming competitions for women up to 1932. Two swimmers who actually participated in this process were interviewed: Blanche Pironnet, and Maria Lenk. Documents from other sources were also used in the process. The interpretation of the sources shows that at the beginning of the 20th century, swimming was a locus of symbolic power, which permitted elite women to conquer public space without much social resistance at the same time that they made it appropriate to state eugenic projects and became visible to a patriarchal and conservative society

Author Biographies

Fabiano Pries Devide, Universidade Federal Fluminense

Doutor. Professor Adjunto do curso de Licenciatura em Educação Física da Universidade Federal Fluminense (UFF/RJ).

Sebastião Josué Votre, Universidade Gama Filho

Doutor. Coordenador do Grupo de Pesquisa Semiótica do Esporte (CNPq). Professor do Programa de Pós-Graduação Stricto Sensu em Educação Física (PPGEF)/UGF-RJ

Published

2011-08-16

Issue

Section

Artigos Originais