‘Skateboarding is not a sport’: Creativity at the margins of capitalism

One might expect skateboarders to be jubilant that the Olympics recognized theirs as an Olympic sport, but their response is ambivalent. Alexis Sablone, a women's street competition participant, does not consider skateboarding ‘a sport’. What is it if not a sport? This article argues that it is...

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Veröffentlicht in:Anthropology today 2024-10, Vol.40 (5), p.10-13
1. Verfasser: Marlovits, John
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:One might expect skateboarders to be jubilant that the Olympics recognized theirs as an Olympic sport, but their response is ambivalent. Alexis Sablone, a women's street competition participant, does not consider skateboarding ‘a sport’. What is it if not a sport? This article argues that it is a fugitive, non‐teleological, open‐source practice for creating new ‘existential territories’ – new forms of personhood, public space and social relationships. Skateboarders’ resistance to centralization and their emphasis on DIY creativity suggests skateboarding involves challenging culturally specific and local norms. It rests on creative remakings of derelict and unevenly developed urban spaces and the construction of new forms of identity and social purpose. The argument is based on fieldwork with the Osaka Daggers.
ISSN:0268-540X
1467-8322
DOI:10.1111/1467-8322.12913