1 / 16

KIWI!!!

KIWI!!!. Identity and Sport in New Zealand Society. Identity. “Identity is the perception of self, shaped by social and ideological values and practices. Self may be considered as individual or the collective self as in a team, region or country.” - McConnell and Edwards, 2000. Activity.

renee
Télécharger la présentation

KIWI!!!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. KIWI!!! Identity and Sport in New Zealand Society

  2. Identity • “Identity is the perception of self, shaped by social and ideological values and practices. Self may be considered as individual or the collective self as in a team, region or country.” -McConnell and Edwards, 2000

  3. Activity • On your own, write a list of 5 things you feel represent you. • In pairs, agree upon 5 things that represent your pair. • In groups, list 5 things that represent your group.

  4. Sport and Identity • Often, a sense of identity is derived from success in sport. • “Our perception of who we are as individuals may be influenced by acceptance in a sporting team and success or failure in the sporting arena.” - Edwards, 2007

  5. Sport and Identity in Society • Sport contributes to identity at both the micro (individual) and macro (regional, national and international) levels of society. • The contributions made by this can be both positive and negative.

  6. Sport and Identity at the Micro Level of NZ Society • At the micro level of society, identity is the perception of one’s self. • “As we interact with our social world, be it sport or other domains of society, we develop a sense of ourselves and how we relate to and interact with the social world in which we move.” -McConnell and Edwards, 2000

  7. Positive Example • If an individual has positive experiences with sport at an early age, they are likely to identify with it in a positive manner. • “I knew early in my life that I was an ahtlete. I understood this about myself on some primal level. Sport wasn’t just something I did: being an athlete was who I was. Sport and physical challenge were my passion… This passion for sport and love of myself as an athlete has sustained me, driven me, and nurtured me throughout my life.” -Griffen, 1998

  8. Negative Example • The impact of sport on shaping identity is not always positive. • “He has lived a strange, self-absorbed existence that has delivered rewards, celebrity and the respect of his peers. But with the collapse of a scrum, and maybe the flick of a selectors pen, it is all about to end. Norm Hewitt will be converted to Joe Average.” -Laws, 2001

  9. Sport and Identity at the Macro Level of NZ Society • At the macro level, identity is based around a collective consciousness or perception. • “Sporting success has often helped to foster a close symbolic link between specific sport and specific places” -Jarvie, 2003

  10. Positive Example • National pride • “The symbol of Aotearoa-New Zealand and sporting excellence is displayed proudly on the chests of those who have earned this right and borne just as proudly by the multitudes of Kiwis living off-shore. Whatever the arena, wherever we are, this burns deeply inside all Kiwis and calls us to action.” -Seymour, 2007

  11. Negative Example • National Shame • “At least I was in the yellow of Oceania and not the black of New Zealand. At least the country was not bearing the shame I felt.” -Walker and Palenski, 1984

  12. Key Questions • What would have happened to NZ identity if we had not sent our athletes to the Olympics? • How was NZ affected when our athletes won medals at the Games? • What happened to athletes who did not win medals?

  13. Implications for P.E

  14. What does all this mean? How does this knowledge affect me, others and society?

  15. What could change? • Are you happy with this current information about identity? • If you could change things about identity at both micro and macro levels, what would they be? • How could we go about changing these things?

More Related