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33 - Sporting virtue and its development

from PART III - APPLIED ETHICS

Michael McNamee
Affiliation:
Swansea University
Stan van Hooft
Affiliation:
Deakin University, Australia
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Summary

SPORT AS A MODERN MORALITY PLAY

In Medieval Europe, the Roman Catholic Church was the dominant social and political institution as well as the seat of higher learning. The vast majority of the populace, however, were illiterate and so the possibility of their following or even understanding its principal ceremony, Holy Mass, conducted in Latin was unthinkable. One fairly wide-spread way of reducing the mysteriousness of religious morality was the enactment of morality plays. Around this time, travelling circuses not only brought entertainment to the masses, but typically included in their show a morality play where good and evil were played out on a stage and where what was at stake was the very soul of the principal character: everyman. In such a way, the dramatic mode brought the expectations of good conduct – and the wages of sin – into sharp and simple relief. Though crudely analogous, it is my contention that sports, among other things, now fulfil this role or function on a global scale. In a world where the enlightenment myth of shared morality is assaulted by anthropologists, cultural commentators and philosophers alike, sports offer a cognitively simple canvas of good and evil writ large in the everyday contexts of the arena, the court, the field and, of course, the back pages of our newspapers and the screens of our televisions.

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Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2013

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