1 / 17

Native Mascot Images in Sports

Native Mascot Images in Sports. Problems:. The dominant group is using a subordinate group’s ethnicity for their own entertainment. Images negatively misrepresent an entire race of people in mainstream media. The Problem is Widespread.

durden
Download Presentation

Native Mascot Images in Sports

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Native Mascot Images in Sports

  2. Problems: • The dominant group is using a subordinate group’s ethnicity for their own entertainment. • Images negatively misrepresent an entire race of people in mainstream media.

  3. The Problem is Widespread Eight of the ten most common nicknames for college sports teams are animals. 1. Eagles  2. Tigers  3. Cougars  4. Bulldogs5. Warriors  6. Lions  7. Panthers8. Indians  9. Wildcats10. Bears

  4. Native Mascots Have Many Forms • Warriors • Indians • Apaches • Fighting Sioux • Fighting Illini • Chiefs • Chieftains • Braves • Redskins • Redmen • Tomahawks • Savages.

  5. Symbolic Meanings Attached to Racist Images in Sports

  6. Symbolism #1 These images are Acceptable Everywhere

  7. Symbolism #2 People Don’t See the Difference

  8. Example Q. What's wrong with Indian mascots? They honor Indians... don't they? A.  Would you paint your face black, wear an afro wig and prance around the football field trying to imitate your perceptions of black people?

  9. Symbolism #3 Historical Meaning The word Redskin derived from the practice ofskinning Indians for easy transport when collecting bounty.

  10. Example of Historical Meaning: • "Chief Osceola" was killed under a flag of truce. His severed head was then kept in a medical museum for 30 years. • To native people the logo of FSU is seen as a present day representation of that severed head.

  11. Sociological Effects Caused by Images

  12. Effect #1 Sociological Meanings of Images • Distorts Native American children's' cultural perceptions of themselves. • Shapes non-Indian attitudes • Diminishes Native culture. • Hurts • Stereotypes • Dehumanizes

  13. Effect #2 It Affects Self Identity Video Clip: In Whose Honor? Embarrassment Sadness Anger

  14. Problem #5 It Affects Native Religions • Feathers, paint & dances are all part of their religious imagery. • By using objects considered sacred by Native people for sports events, in this land based on religious freedom, it mocks the religion itself.

  15. Example of How Religious Mimicking is offensive: Q. Shouldn't we then protest the New Orleans Saints because they are offensive to Christians? A. No. They are not selling toy crucifixes as souvenirs and a little mascot dressed as the Pope doesn’t run around.

  16. Effect #3 Violent References in the Media • "Cowboys finish off Redskins“ • “Kill the Indians” shouted by opposing teams • “Cougars scalp Sioux 31-24" • “Orioles gun down Indians”

  17. Intentional or Unintentional, Native Mascot Images are Negative "We don't view it as looking down on their race..."  - Athletic director, Ohio H.S. which has an "Indian head" doormat in the hallway.

More Related