[en] Recognizing geographic and cultural alterity through sport? Institutionalizing the Arctic Games
Type de document
Auteur(s)
Instance
UNIV-RENNES2
Est une partie de
Mots clés en
Humanities and Social Sciences/Sociology
Recognition
Olympics
Justice
Pride
Arctic Games
Mots clés fr
Date de publication
Langue du document
Anglais
Editeur
Olympic Studies Centre at the German Sport University Cologne
Résumé
[en] The article studies the emergence and growth of the Arctic Games on the basis of a comparison with other attempts of re-appropriation of the Olympic model. How was the autonomist strategy that founds these games born? Beyond the question of access to sporting practices, the goal is to show that this strategy aims at engaging a cultural transformation through a renegotiation of the norms and values which are carried by the dominant Western sports practices. Using documents archived on the official website of the Arctic Games as well as second hand data, the analysis sheds light on the manner in which this sporting event is a part of a strategy fighting for recognition (Honneth 1992). As a vector for cultural pride, it constitutes a call for justice (Rawls 1971) in reaction to the minorisation, or even the contempt, experienced by the populations which are native of Northern Canada.
Nom de la revue
Diagoras : International Academic Journal on Olympic Studies
Collection
Source
HAL
Type de ressource
Texte intégral
Est une version de
Licence
Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Citation bibliographique
Sylvain Ferez, Sébastien Ruffié, Stéphane Héas. Recognizing geographic and cultural alterity through sport? Institutionalizing the Arctic Games. Diagoras : International Academic Journal on Olympic Studies, 2018, 2, pp.27-46. [hal-02172160]
Citer cette ressource
[en] Recognizing geographic and cultural alterity through sport? Institutionalizing the Arctic Games,
dans Études nordiques,
consulté le 19 Avril 2025, https://etudes-nordiques.cnrs.fr/s/numenord/item/18187