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  5. Following women's sports : the behavior of fans
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Following women's sports : the behavior of fans

Date Issued
May 1, 1999
Author(s)
Harrison, Gerald D.
Advisor(s)
Suzanne B. Kurth
Additional Advisor(s)
Sherry Cable
Michael L. Benson
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/46529
Abstract

The sociology of sport literature provides limited information about ordinary sports audiences, too often focusing on the extremes—hooligans or rowdies who engage in violent behavior and television viewers who are not direct participants. This paper investigates the behavior and characteristics of fans attending 21 women's competitive events at a large southeastern university. Using qualitative research techniques, fans' characteristics (gender, age, dress) and behaviors (vocalizations, body movements) were recorded. Observation were made at home game/matches for two intercollegiate women's sports (soccer and volleyball). Typically, more men than women attended these events. Fans at these women's events may be less likely to adorn themselves or carry with them school or team paraphernalia, than fans at events which draw more attention (men's football, women's basketball). Fans at women's events may be less likely to engage in the aggressive behavior expressed by a subset of fans at men's sporting event.". These women's sports fans refer to players by their first names, and treat them like knowable others rather than unknowable stars, and these fans perceived relationship with competitors appears to be different than those at men's events. By studying the increasing numbers of fans of collegiate women's sports, our limited knowledge of sports fans at all types of events can be expanded and of the ways in which audience behavior parallels and diverges from other forms of collective behavior..

Degree
Master of Arts
Major
Sociology
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

Thesis99H375.pdf

Size

1.21 MB

Format

Unknown

Checksum (MD5)

cafd3760857f66ee73ec055d49d76846

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