The Circle of Unity: The power of symbols in a team sport context

Modern-day political discord has led to a recent spate of athletes using their platform to make statements about America. One under-researched aspect to modern sport activism is the study of the symbols themselves, such as the controversial kneeling during the national anthem by National Football L...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brendan O'Hallarn, Craig Morehead, Mark Slavich, Alicia Cintron
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Kansas Libraries 2021-02-01
Series:Journal of Intercollegiate Sport
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ku.edu/jis/article/view/13367
_version_ 1797448966430785536
author Brendan O'Hallarn
Craig Morehead
Mark Slavich
Alicia Cintron
author_facet Brendan O'Hallarn
Craig Morehead
Mark Slavich
Alicia Cintron
author_sort Brendan O'Hallarn
collection DOAJ
description Modern-day political discord has led to a recent spate of athletes using their platform to make statements about America. One under-researched aspect to modern sport activism is the study of the symbols themselves, such as the controversial kneeling during the national anthem by National Football League players, statement-making pregame apparel worn by National Basketball Association stars, and other political statements. This case study examines a 2016 activist display by Old Dominion University’s football team, known as the Circle of Unity. The display, performed before most games that season, began as a form of protest by team captains, and morphed into a gesture that was celebrated across the political spectrum. Through the lens of both Symbolic Interactionism (SI) and Critical Race Theory (CRT), the current study seeks to uncover the impetus, meaning, and ultimate impact of the symbol on a variety of stakeholders. Examining the symbol used—players and coaches standing in a circle, facing out, holding hands and raising them to the sky—can further contextualize the challenging role that student-athletes have in finding their voice to speak on issues they care about in a divided America.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T14:18:28Z
format Article
id doaj.art-348c79ceaee940d496b75b0bbc302c06
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1941-6342
1941-417X
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T14:18:28Z
publishDate 2021-02-01
publisher University of Kansas Libraries
record_format Article
series Journal of Intercollegiate Sport
spelling doaj.art-348c79ceaee940d496b75b0bbc302c062023-11-28T18:45:38ZengUniversity of Kansas LibrariesJournal of Intercollegiate Sport1941-63421941-417X2021-02-0114110.17161/jis.v14i1.13367The Circle of Unity: The power of symbols in a team sport contextBrendan O'Hallarn0Craig MoreheadMark SlavichAlicia CintronOld Dominion University Modern-day political discord has led to a recent spate of athletes using their platform to make statements about America. One under-researched aspect to modern sport activism is the study of the symbols themselves, such as the controversial kneeling during the national anthem by National Football League players, statement-making pregame apparel worn by National Basketball Association stars, and other political statements. This case study examines a 2016 activist display by Old Dominion University’s football team, known as the Circle of Unity. The display, performed before most games that season, began as a form of protest by team captains, and morphed into a gesture that was celebrated across the political spectrum. Through the lens of both Symbolic Interactionism (SI) and Critical Race Theory (CRT), the current study seeks to uncover the impetus, meaning, and ultimate impact of the symbol on a variety of stakeholders. Examining the symbol used—players and coaches standing in a circle, facing out, holding hands and raising them to the sky—can further contextualize the challenging role that student-athletes have in finding their voice to speak on issues they care about in a divided America. https://journals.ku.edu/jis/article/view/13367Athlete activism; politics in sport; symbolic interactionism; college football; Old Dominion University
spellingShingle Brendan O'Hallarn
Craig Morehead
Mark Slavich
Alicia Cintron
The Circle of Unity: The power of symbols in a team sport context
Journal of Intercollegiate Sport
Athlete activism; politics in sport; symbolic interactionism; college football; Old Dominion University
title The Circle of Unity: The power of symbols in a team sport context
title_full The Circle of Unity: The power of symbols in a team sport context
title_fullStr The Circle of Unity: The power of symbols in a team sport context
title_full_unstemmed The Circle of Unity: The power of symbols in a team sport context
title_short The Circle of Unity: The power of symbols in a team sport context
title_sort circle of unity the power of symbols in a team sport context
topic Athlete activism; politics in sport; symbolic interactionism; college football; Old Dominion University
url https://journals.ku.edu/jis/article/view/13367
work_keys_str_mv AT brendanohallarn thecircleofunitythepowerofsymbolsinateamsportcontext
AT craigmorehead thecircleofunitythepowerofsymbolsinateamsportcontext
AT markslavich thecircleofunitythepowerofsymbolsinateamsportcontext
AT aliciacintron thecircleofunitythepowerofsymbolsinateamsportcontext
AT brendanohallarn circleofunitythepowerofsymbolsinateamsportcontext
AT craigmorehead circleofunitythepowerofsymbolsinateamsportcontext
AT markslavich circleofunitythepowerofsymbolsinateamsportcontext
AT aliciacintron circleofunitythepowerofsymbolsinateamsportcontext