| Sex Testing: Gender Policing in Women''s Sports Subjects: Women athletes -- Physiology; Sex discrimination in sports; Sports -- Sex differences; IOC Medical Commission; BISAC: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Womenʹs Studies; SPORTS & RECREATION / Olympics; In 1968, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) implemented sex testing for female athletes at that year's Games. When it became clear that testing regimes failed to delineate a sex divide, the IOC began to test for gender --a shift that allowed the organization to control the very idea of womanhood. Ranging from Cold War tensions to gender anxiety to controversies around doping, Lindsay Parks Pieper explores sex testing in sport from the 1930s to the early 2000s. Pieper examines how the IOC in particular insisted on a misguided binary notion of gender that privileged Western norms. Testing evolved into a tool to identify--and eliminate--athletes the IOC deemed too strong, too fast, or too successful. Pieper shows how this system punished gifted women while hindering the development of women's athletics for decades. She also reveals how the flawed notions behind testing--ideas often sexist, racist, or ridiculous--degraded the very idea of female athleticism. Lindsay Parks Pieper is an assistant professor of sport management at Lynchburg College. |