`It was my thought … he made it a reality`: Normalization and responsibility in athletes` accounts of performance-enhancing drug use

Despite the widespread interest in athletes` use of performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) in track and field, the voices of the athletes who use banned substances have seldom been heard. Interviews with competitive athletes were conducted to explore their relationship to doping. Two themes emerged from the interviews. Firstly, the athletes presented doping as a normalized part of competitive sport, inevitably involving the participation of coaching staff. Secondly, and in contrast to the first theme, athletes maintained that they alone were responsible for the decision to use PEDs. The study supports the `networked athlete` explanation of PED use, while highlighting the individualist explanation of doping offered by the athletes themselves. Foucault`s concept of governmentality is used to explain this contradiction, by suggesting that athletes` internalization of responsibility for doping is part of the art of governing competitive sport.
© Copyright 2013 International Review for the Sociology of Sport. SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:social sciences sport history and sport politics
Published in:International Review for the Sociology of Sport
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1177/1012690212442116
Volume:48
Issue:3
Pages:277-294
Document types:article
Level:advanced