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Chapter 8 From “the National Pride” to “the Daughters”: Media representations of Olympic sportswomen in Turkey

  • Yasemin Erdoğan-Öztürk , Esranur Efeoğlu-Özcan and Hale Işık-Güler
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© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Acknowledgments VII
  3. Contents IX
  4. Approaching issues of inclusion and exclusion in sports through language 1
  5. Part I: Creating inclusion/exclusion in authentic interaction
  6. Chapter 1 ‘Dribble dribble dribble! Dribbling is the most elementary in football’: Doing inclusion in park-based children’s sport 17
  7. Chapter 2 #StillWeRise: The sociolinguistics of race, inequalities, and athlete activist identities in Formula 1 social media 43
  8. Chapter 3 Do collective pronouns construct inclusive coach-athlete relations? 65
  9. Chapter 4 Constructing inclusive team management structures: Evidence of multiparty participation in the leadership of a university basketball team 83
  10. Chapter 5 Banter as a tactic of inclusion in sports organizations 105
  11. Chapter 6 “Sisters are hot”. Denying netball players their athletic identities through sexualisation practices in online fan groups in Malawi 125
  12. Part II: Inclusion/exclusion in the sports media. The representation of female and transgender athletes
  13. Chapter 7 Good girls and bad boys? A corpus analysis of gendered discourses in Australian media coverage of “masculine” team sports 147
  14. Chapter 8 From “the National Pride” to “the Daughters”: Media representations of Olympic sportswomen in Turkey 171
  15. Chapter 9 “Fairness versus inclusion”: Representations of transgender athletes in British newspaper reports 193
  16. Part III: Reflecting on the language of inclusion and exclusion by athletes and coaches
  17. Chapter 10 Within binaries instead of beyond? The discursive (self-)exclusion of young female football players from football as a male and masculine space 217
  18. Chapter 11 A critical examination of homo-negative language use and the pragmatics of inclusion and exclusion of gay rugby players 253
  19. Chapter 12 “Ha ha ha you don’t cover you aurat”: Exploring modesty, prayer, and Malaysian Muslim women gymnasts’ experience of inclusion and/or exclusion 271
  20. Chapter 13 Putting inclusion into practice: A sociolinguistic lens on institutional practices for establishing an inclusive sports organisation 291
  21. Chapter 14 Bringing everything together: Considering the role of language in effecting inclusion and exclusion in sport 309
  22. List of contributors 323
  23. Index 327
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