‘Real’ boys, sissies and tomboys: exploring the material-discursive intra-actions of football, bodies, and heteronormative discourses

Journal article


Kostas, M. 2021. ‘Real’ boys, sissies and tomboys: exploring the material-discursive intra-actions of football, bodies, and heteronormative discourses. British Journal of Sociology of Education. 43 (1), pp. 63-83. https://doi.org/10.1080/01425692.2021.1999790
AuthorsKostas, M.
Abstract

School playgrounds are critical arenas wherein children’s gender performances unfold, and ‘games’ of gender subordination or domination transpire. Theoretically predicated on Butlerian and Baradian gender performativity approaches, this qualitative study analyses how children negotiate and perform gender, exploring the material-discursive effects of human and non-human agents (e.g. football, sartorial elements) in their intra-actions with the body. Data were collected through observations and semi-structured interviews with 80 pupils from two Athenian elementary schools.

Findings showed that playgrounds were dichotomised into rigid gender zones, and the children reaffirmed their gender allegiances by forming gender-homogeneous playgroups and engaging in diametrical activities. Gender-zone transgressions were frequent, albeit with high social and emotional cost, especially for boys who were uninterested in football and lacked athletic dexterity. Finally, the results highlighted the effects of material-discursive forces in gender identity development and, specifically, how ‘successful’ masculinity, girly femininity, sissies, and tomboys emerged through the material-discursive intra-actions of playgrounds, bodies, football, and heteronormative discourses.

KeywordsSociology and Political Science; Education
Year2021
JournalBritish Journal of Sociology of Education
Journal citation43 (1), pp. 63-83
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN0142-5692
1465-3346
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/01425692.2021.1999790
Official URLhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01425692.2021.1999790
FunderN/A
Publication dates
Online11 Nov 2021
Print02 Jan 2022
Publication process dates
Accepted15 Oct 2021
Deposited12 Nov 2021
Accepted author manuscript
File Access Level
Open
Publisher's version
File Access Level
Open
Output statusPublished
References

Anderson, E. 2009. Inclusive Masculinity: The Changing Nature of Masculinities. Oxford: Routledge.
Atencio, M., and C. Koca. 2011. “Gendered Communities of Practice and the Construction of
Masculinities in Turkish Physical Education.” Gender and Education 23 (1): 59–72. doi:10.1080/
09540250903519444.
Athanasiades, C., and V. Deliyanni- Kouimtzis. 2010. “The Experience of Bullying among Secondary
School Students.” Psychology in the Schools 47 (4): 328–341. doi:10.1002/pits.20473.
Barad, K. 2003. “Posthumanist Performativity: Toward an Understanding of How Matter Comes to
Matter.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 28 (3): 801–831. doi:10.1086/345321.
Barad, K. 2007. Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and
Meaning. London: Duke University Press.
Barnes, C. 2012. “It’s No Laughing Matter … Boys’ Humour and the Performance of Defensive
Masculinities in the Classroom.” Journal of Gender Studies 21 (3): 239–251. doi:10.1080/09589236.
2012.691648.
Bartholomaeus, C. 2012. “I’m Not Allowed Wrestling Stuff: Hegemonic Masculinity and Primary
School Boys.” Journal of Sociology 48 (3): 227–247. doi:10.1177/1440783311413484.
Bhana, D. 2005. “Show Me the Panties’: Girls Play Games in the School Playground.” In Seven Going
on Seventeen, edited by C. Mitchell and J. Reid-Walsh, 159–168. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
Bhana, D. 2008. “Girls Hit!’ Constructing and Negotiating Violent African Femininities in a WorkingClass Primary School.” Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 29 (3): 401–415.
Bhana, D., E. Mayeza. 2016. “We Don’t Play with Gays, They’re Not Real Boys … They Can’t Fight’:
Hegemonic Masculinity and (Homophobic) Violence in the Primary Years of Schooling.”
International Journal of Educational Development 51: 36–42. doi:10.1016/j.ijedudev.2016.08.002.
Blatchford, P., Ed Baines, and A. Pellegrini. 2003. “The Social Context of School Playground Games:
Sex and Ethnic Differences, and Changes over Time after Entry to Junior School.” British Journal
of Developmental Psychology 21 (4): 481–505. doi:10.1348/026151003322535183.
Bouna, A. 2018. “Gendered Dimensions of School Violence.” PhD diss., University of Ioannina,
Ioannina.
Bryman, A. 2012. Social Research Methods. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Butler, J. 1990. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New York & London:
Routledge.
Campbell, D., S. Gray, J. Kelly, and S. MacIsaac. 2018. “Inclusive and Exclusive Masculinities in
Physical Education: A Scottish Case Study.” Sport, Education and Society 23 (3): 216–228.
doi:10.1080/13573322.2016.1167680.
Chambers, D., J. Van Loon, and E. Tincknell. 2004. “Teachers’ Views of Teenage Sexual Morality.”
British Journal of Sociology of Education 25 (5): 563–576. doi:10.1080/0142569042000252053.
Clark, S., and C. Paechter. 2007. “Why Can’t Girls Play Football?’ Gender Dynamics and the
Playground.” Sport, Education and Society 12 (3): 261–276. doi:10.1080/13573320701464085.
Craig, T., and J. LaCroix. 2011. “Tomboy as Protective Identity.” Journal of Lesbian Studies 15 (4):
450–465. doi:10.1080/10894160.2011.532030.
Davies, B. 2006. “Identity Abjection and Otherness: Creating the Self, Creating Difference.” In The
RoutledgeFalmer Reader in Education, edited by Arnot Madeleine and Mairtin Mac an Ghail,
72–92. New York: Routledge.
Dudley, D. A., W. G. Cotton, L. R. Peralta, and M. Winslade. 2018. “Playground Activities and
Gender Variation in Objectively Measured Physical Activity Intensity in Australian Primary
School Children: A Repeated Measures Study.” BMC Public Health 18 (1): 1101. doi:10.1186/
s12889-018-6005-5.
Dyment, J. E., A. C. Bell, and A. J. Lucas. 2009. “The Relationship between School Ground
Design and Intensity of Physical Activity.” Children’s Geographies 7 (3): 261–276. doi:10.1080/
14733280903024423.
Fagrell, B., H. Larsson, and K. Redelius. 2012. “The Game within the Game: Girls’ Underperforming
Position in Physical Education.” Gender and Education 24 (1): 101–118. doi:10.1080/09540253.
2011.582032.
FRA. 2016. “Professionally Speaking: challenges to achieving equality for LGBT people.” Accessed 6 July
2021. https://fra.europa.eu/sites/default/files/fra_uploads/fra-2016-lgbt-...
Francis, B. 1998. Power Play: Children’s Constructions of Gender, Power and Adult Work. Stoke-onTrent: Trentham Books.
Gerouki, M. 2010. “The Boy Who Was Drawing Princesses: primary Teachers’ Accounts of Children’s
Non-Conforming Behaviours.” Sex Education 10 (4): 335–348. doi:10.1080/14681811.2010.515092.
Gold, R. L. 1958. “Roles in Sociological Fieldwork.” Social Forces 36 (3): 217–223.
doi:10.2307/2573808.
Hickey, C. 2008. “Physical Education, Sport and Hyper-Masculinity in Schools.” Sport, Education
and Society 13 (2): 147–161. doi:10.1080/13573320801957061.
Hitchcock, G., and D. Hughes. 1989. Research and the Teacher: A Qualitative Introduction to SchoolBased Research. London: Routledge.
Ioannou, C. 2018. “Combating HomophoBic and Transphobic Bullying in Schools: National Report:
Greece.” https://www.hombat.eu/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/HOMBAT_NATIONAL_REP...
EL_English_Left_Aligned.pdf
Karakiozis, K., C. Papapanousi, E. C. Papakitsos, and A. Argyriou. 2015. “Recording the Opinion of
Students about the Attitude of Adults in School-Bullying.” International Journal of Academic Research
in Progressive Education and Development 4 (1): 178–189. doi:10.6007/IJARPED/v4-i1/1652.
Kehily, M. J., M. Mac An Ghaill, D. Epstein, and P. Redman. 2002. “Private Girls and Public Worlds:
Producing Femininities in the Primary School.” Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of
Education 23 (2): 167–177. doi:10.1080/0159630022000000750.
Kitzinger, J. 1994. “The Methodology of Focus Groups: The Importance of Interaction between Research
Participants.” Sociology of Health and Illness 16 (1): 103–121. doi:10.1111/1467-9566.ep11347023.
Kostas, M. 2018. “Snow White in Hellenic Primary Classrooms: Children’s Responses to Non-Traditional
Gender Discourses.” Gender and Education 30 (4): 530–548. doi:10.1080/09540253.2016.1237619.
Kostas, M. 2021. “Discursive Construction of Hegemonic Masculinity and Emphasised Femininity
in the Textbooks of Primary Education: children’s Discursive Agency and Polysemy of the
Narratives.” Gender and Education 33 (1): 50–67. doi:10.1080/09540253.2019.1632807.
Kostas, M. 2014. “Gender Discourses and Identities in the Curriculum and Classrooms of Hellenic
Primary Schools.” PhD diss., UCL Institute of Education, London.
Lankshear, A. J. 1993. “The Use of Focus Groups in a Study of Attitudes to Student Nurse Assessment.”
Journal of Advanced Nursing 18 (12): 1986–1989. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2648.1993.18121986.x.
Lewis, A. 1992. “Group Child Interviews as a Research Tool.” British Educational Research Journal
18 (4): 413–421. doi:10.1080/0141192920180407.
Light, R. 2008. “Boys, the Body, Sport and Schooling.” Sport, Education and Society 13 (2): 127–130.
doi:10.1080/13573320801957046.
Lofland, J., and L. H. Lofland. 1984. Analyzing Social Settings. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
Martínez-Andrés, M., R. Bartolomé-Gutiérrez, B. Rodríguez-Martín, M. J. Pardo-Guijarro, and V.
Martínez-Vizcaíno. 2017. “Football is a Boys’ Game: Children’s Perceptions about Barriers for
Physical Activity during Recess Time.” International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and
Well-Being 12 (sup2): 1379338.
Martínez-García, M., L., and C. Rodríguez-Menéndez. 2020a. “‘I Can Try It’: negotiating Masculinity
through Football in the Playground.” Sport, Education and Society 25 (2): 199–212. doi:10.1080/
13573322.2018.1564653.
Martínez-García, M., L., and C. Rodríguez-Menéndez. 2020b. “‘They could be good players if they
trained’: exploring the football discourse of five-year-old boys and girls.” Journal of Gender
Studies 30 (6): 737–751. doi:10.1080/09589236.2020.1811652.
Mayeza, E. 2017. “‘Girls Don’t Play Soccer’: children Policing Gender on the Playground in a
Township Primary School in South Africa.” Gender and Education 29 (4): 476–494. doi:10.1080/
09540253.2016.1187262.
Mayeza, E. 2018. “‘Charmer Boys’ and ‘Cream Girls’: how Primary School Children Construct
Themselves as Heterosexual Subjects through Football.” Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics
of Education 39 (1): 128–141.
Mayeza, E., and D. Bhana. 2020a. “Boys Negotiate Violence and Masculinity in the Primary School.”
British Journal of Sociology of Education 41 (3): 426–443. doi:10.1080/01425692.2020.1721267.
Mayeza, E., and D. Bhana. 2020b. “How “Real Boys” Construct Heterosexuality on the Primary
School Playground.” Journal of Research in Childhood Education 34 (2): 267–276. doi:
10.1080/02568543.2019.1675825.
McGuffey, C. S., and B. L. Rich. 1999. “Playing in the Gender Transgression Zone: Race.” Gender &
Society 13 (5): 608–627. doi:10.1177/089124399013005003.
McKenzie, T. L. 2006. “System for observing play and leisure activity in youth (SOPLAY).” https://
activelivingresearch.org/sites/activelivingresearch.org/files/SOPLAY_Protocols.pdf (Accessed
April 2021).
McKenzie T., D. Cohen, A. Sehgal, S. Williamson, and D. Golinelli 2006. “System for Observing Play
and Recreation in Communities (SOPARC): reliability and feasibility measures.” Journal of
Physical Activity and Health 3 (1): 208–222. 10.1123/jpah.3.s1.s208.
Paechter, C. 2006. “Masculine Femininities/Feminine Masculinities: power, Identities and Gender.”
Gender and Education 18 (3): 253–263. doi:10.1080/09540250600667785.
Paechter, C. 2010. “Tomboys and girly-girls: embodied femininities in primary schools.” Discourse:
Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 31 (2): 221–235. doi:10.1080/01596301003679743.
Paechter, C. 2012. “Bodies, Identities and Performances: Reconfiguring the Language of Gender and
Schooling.” Gender and Education 24 (2): 229–241. doi:10.1080/09540253.2011.606210.
Paechter, C., and S. Clark. 2007. “Learning Gender in Primary School Playgrounds: Findings from
the Tomboy Identities Study.” Pedagogy, Culture & Society 15 (3): 317–331.
doi:10.1080/14681360701602224.
Pascoe, C. J. 2007. Dude, You’re a Fag: Masculinity and Sexuality in High School. Berkeley and Los
Angeles, California: University of California Press.
Pawlowski, C. S., T. Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, J. Schipperijn, and J. Troelsen. 2014. “Barriers for Recess
Physical Activity: A Gender Specific Qualitative Focus Group Exploration.” BMC Public Health
14 (1): 639.
Prout, A., and A. James. 1997. Constructing and Reconstructing Childhood: Contemporary Issues in
the Sociological Study of Childhood. London: Falmer.
Renold, E. 1997. “‘All They’ve Got on Their Brains is Football.’ Sport, Masculinity and the Gendered
Practices of Playground Relations.” Sport, Education and Society 2 (1): 5–23. doi:10.1080/
1357332970020101.
Renold, E. 2004. “Other’ Boys: Negotiating Non-Hegemonic Masculinities in the Primary School.”
Gender and Education 16 (2): 247–265.
Renold, E. 2005. Girls, Boys, and Junior Sexualities: Exploring Children’s Gender and Sexual Relations
in the Primary School. London: Routledge Falmer.
Renold, E. 2006. “‘They Won’t Let Us Play... Unless You’ re Going out with One of Them’: Girls, Boys
and Butler’s ‘Heterosexual Matrix’ in the Primary Years.” British Journal of Sociology of Education
27 (4): 489–509. doi:10.1080/01425690600803111.
Renold, E. 2008. “Queering Masculinity: Re-Theorising Contemporary Tomboyism in the Schizoid
Space of Innocent/Heterosexualized Young Femininities.” Girlhood Studies 1 (2): 129–151.
doi:10.3167/ghs.2008.010208.
Renold, E. 2013. Boys and Girls Speak out: A Qualitative Study of Children’s Gender and Sexual Cultures
(Age 10-12). Cardiff: Cardiff University, NSPCC and Children’s Commissioner’s Office for Wales.
Renold, E., and A. Allan. 2006. “Bright and Beautiful: High-Achieving Girls, Ambivalent Femininities
and the Feminisation of Success.” Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 27 (4):
457–475.
Renold, E., and J. Ringrose. 2008. “Regulation and Rupture: mapping Tween and Teenage Girls’
‘Resistance’ to the Heterosexual Matrix.” Feminist Theory 9 (3): 313–360. doi:10.1177/
1464700108095854.
Richards, C. 2012. “Playing under Surveillance: Gender, Performance and the Conduct of the Self in
a Primary School Playground.” British Journal of Sociology of Education 33 (3): 373–390.
doi:10.1080/01425692.2012.659457.
Ridgers, N. D., G. Stratton, and T. L. McKenzie. 2010. “Reliability and Validity of the System for
Observing Children’s Activity and Relationships during Play (SOCARP).” Journal of Physical
Activity and Health 7 (1): 17–25. doi:10.1123/jpah.7.1.17.
Ringrose, J., and V. Rawlings. 2015. “Posthuman Performativity, Gender, and ‘School Bullying’:
Exploring the Material-Discursive Intra-Actions of Skirts, Hair, Sluts, and Poofs.” Confero: Essays
on Education, Philosophy and Politics 3 (2): 80–119. doi:10.3384/confero.2001-4562.150626.
Robinson, K., and C. Davies. 2010. “Tomboys and Sissy Girls: Exploring Girls’ Power, Agency and
Female Relationships in Childhood through the Memories of Women.” Australasian Journal of
Early Childhood 35 (1): 24–31. doi:10.1177/183693911003500105.
Robson, C. 2002. Real World Research. 2nd ed. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.
Shilling, C. 1991. “Social Space, Gender Inequalities and Educational Differentiation.” British
Journal of Sociology of Education 12 (1): 23–44. doi:10.1080/0142569910120102.
Silva, P., P. Botelho-Gomes, and S. V. Goellner. 2012. “Masculinities and Sport: The Emphasis on
Hegemonic Masculinity in Portuguese Physical Education Classes.” International Journal of
Qualitative Studies in Education 25 (3): 269–291. doi:10.1080/09518398.2010.529846.
Spruyt-Metz, D. 1999. Adolescence, Affect, and Health. London: Psychology Press.
Swain, J. 2000. “The Money’s Good, the Fame’s Good, the Girls Are Good’: The Role of Playground
Football in the Construction of Young Boys’ Masculinity in a Junior School.” British Journal of
Sociology of Education 21 (1): 95–109. doi:10.1080/01425690095180.
Swain, J. 2003. “How Young Schoolboys Become Somebody: The Role of the Body in the Construction
of Masculinity.” British Journal of Sociology of Education 24 (3): 299–314. doi:10.1080/01425690301890.
Swain, J. 2006. “Reflections on Patterns of Masculinity in School Settings.” Men and Masculinities 8
(3): 331–349. doi:10.1177/1097184X05282203.
Thomson, S. 2005. “Territorialising’ the Primary School Playground: Deconstructing the Geography
of Playtime.” Children’s Geographies 3: 67–78.
Thornberg, R. 2018. “School Bullying and Fitting into the Peer Landscape: A Grounded Theory
Field Study.” British Journal of Sociology of Education 39 (1): 144–158. doi:10.1080/01425692.2017.
1330680.
Weedon, C. 1987. Feminist Practice and Poststructuralist Theory. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell
Publishers Inc.
Wellard, I. 2009. Sport, Masculinities and the Body. New York, NY: Routledge.

Additional information

Publications router: Date 2021-11-11 of type 'publication_date' with format 'electronic' included in notification
Publications router: Date 2021-11-11 of type 'epub' included in notification
Publications router: Date 2022-01-02 of type 'ppub' included in notification
Publications router: Date 2021-11-11 of type 'issued' included in notification

Publications router: License for VOR version of this article starting on 2021-11-11: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ included in notification

Page range1-21
Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Permalink -

https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/8z906/-real-boys-sissies-and-tomboys-exploring-the-material-discursive-intra-actions-of-football-bodies-and-heteronormative-discourses

  • 147
    total views
  • 64
    total downloads
  • 3
    views this month
  • 0
    downloads this month

Export as

Related outputs

Textbooks, students and teachers talk around gender: A new materialist approach to children's agency
Kostas, M. 2023. Textbooks, students and teachers talk around gender: A new materialist approach to children's agency. Teaching and Teacher Education. 125, p. 104052. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tate.2023.104052
Discursive construction of hegemonic masculinity and emphasised femininity in the textbooks of primary education: children’s discursive agency and polysemy of the narratives
Kostas, M. 2019. Discursive construction of hegemonic masculinity and emphasised femininity in the textbooks of primary education: children’s discursive agency and polysemy of the narratives. Gender and Education. 33 (1), pp. 50-67. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540253.2019.1632807
Snow White in the Hellenic primary classrooms: children's responses to non-traditional gender discourses.
Kostas, M. 2016. Snow White in the Hellenic primary classrooms: children's responses to non-traditional gender discourses. Gender and Education. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540253.2016.1237619