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Body & Society, Vol. 9, No. 2, 75-95 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/1357034X030092004

Sport, Genetics and the `Natural Athlete': The Resurgence of Racial Science

BRETT ST LOUIS

University of Bristol

This article explores the ethical implications of recent discussions that naturalize the relationship between race, the body and sport within the frame of genetic science. Many suggestions of a racially distributed genetic basis for athletic ability and performance are strategically posited as a resounding critique of the `politically correct' meta-narratives of established sociological and anthropological forms of explanation that emphasize the social and cultural construction of race. I argue that this use of genetic science in order to describe and explain common-sense impressions of racial physiology and sporting ability is founded on erroneous premises of objectivity and disinterest, and inflates the analytical efficacy of scientific truth claims. I suggest that assertions of a value-free science of racial athletic ability reify race as inherited permanent biological characteristics that produce social hierarchies and are more characteristic of a longer history of `racial science'.

Key Words: bioculturalism • difference • ethics • racism • representation


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