Abstract
Bodybuilding is an increasingly popular sport in the United States. Across fields of psychology, history, sociology, and anthropology, bodybuilding has been examined as being related to, or as manifestly being, a pathology. Extant work on men who are bodybuilders are often built on the assumption that narcissism, self-doubt, and insecurity are the driving forces for men’s involvement. The present study sought to examine the experiences of eleven men who have competed in bodybuilding competitions. In contrast to the dominant academic discourse on bodybuilding as an embodiment of toxic masculinity or as a reaction to underlying feelings of inferiority, the study participants described friendly, supportive competition contexts. That such feelings were found backstage, as opposed to in a gym, strengthens the need for a more nuanced distinction between bodybuilding as a culture, and bodybuilding as a sport. This study disrupts dominant narratives of bodybuilding as pathological and contributes to work on the construction of gender and masculinity in sport. The present work suggests a scholarly approach to men’s bodybuilding in an open and nuanced manner that does not focus on pathologizing bodybuilding or competition.
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Parent: Conceptualization, data collection, analysis lead, writing lead. Heffernan: Analysis assistance, writing assistance. Woznicki and Taylor: Analysis assistance.
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Parent, M.C., Heffernan, C., Woznicki, N. et al. Competition or Community? The Backstage Experience of Men in Bodybuilding Competitions. Sex Roles 87, 68–84 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11199-022-01310-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11199-022-01310-4