Artwork

Content provided by Sara Gross, PhD and Sara Gross. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sara Gross, PhD and Sara Gross or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

Croissants and Commentary #3: The Surprising Sexist History of the Olympics — And Why It Still Matters

1:09:46
 
Share
 

Manage episode 422803953 series 3005519
Content provided by Sara Gross, PhD and Sara Gross. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sara Gross, PhD and Sara Gross or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Why do we spend so much time talking about the history of women's sports? Because what doctors, coaches, and fans think women are capable of on the track or field changes how women are viewed in all parts of society. Like how women's colleges had mandatory rest days for their female students, because women were believed to be too physically weak to handle the stress of attending school.

Today, Sara and Kelly talk about surprising moments in the Olympics that have been lost to misogyny and inaccurate coverage. And, Kelly speaks to Maggie Merton about her new book "Better Faster Farther: How Running Changed Everything We Know About Women."

Maggie dives into the history to examine how doctors, coaches, sports associations, and the media fought hard to keep women out of sports. They misreported what really happened, lied about races, and perpetuated medical myths that simply weren't true.

But it's time to learn about all the surprising moments you might not have known from the Olympics and the history of women's sports. Like the female athlete pioneers, including:

  • Stamatis Rovithi, who actually ran the marathon at the very first modern Olympics in 1896
  • Diane Leather, who was the first woman to break the 5-minute mile
  • Alice Milliat, who started a separate Women’s Olympic Games
  • Jasmin Paris, who was the first woman to finish the Barkley Marathons

Where we are now is a product of where we came from, and still shapes things today.

Join the FREE Women's Sports Fan Club: fanclub.feisty.co

Sign up to Receive The Feisty 40+ Newsletter:

https://www.feistymenopause.com/blog/Feisty-40-plus

Sign up to Receive The Feist Newsletter:

https://www.womensperformance.com/the-feist

Follow us on Instagram:

@feisty_womens_performance

Feisty Media Website:

https://livefeisty.com/

https://www.womensperformance.com/

Support our Partners:

PILLAR Performance: use code FEISTY for 15% off first-purchases at https://pillarperformance.shop/, or https://thefeed.com/ for North American listeners.

Hettas: Use code FEISTY20 for 20% off at https://hettas.com/

Tifosi Optics: Use code FM20! for 20% off at https://tifosioptics.com/

The Amino Co: Shop Feisty's Favorite 100% Science-Backed Amino Acid Supplements. Enter code PERFORMANCE at Aminoco.com/PERFORMANCE to Save 30% + receive a FREE gift for new purchasers!

MOTTIV: Get two months of full premium access with the code FEISTY at mymottiv.com

  continue reading

152 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 422803953 series 3005519
Content provided by Sara Gross, PhD and Sara Gross. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sara Gross, PhD and Sara Gross or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Why do we spend so much time talking about the history of women's sports? Because what doctors, coaches, and fans think women are capable of on the track or field changes how women are viewed in all parts of society. Like how women's colleges had mandatory rest days for their female students, because women were believed to be too physically weak to handle the stress of attending school.

Today, Sara and Kelly talk about surprising moments in the Olympics that have been lost to misogyny and inaccurate coverage. And, Kelly speaks to Maggie Merton about her new book "Better Faster Farther: How Running Changed Everything We Know About Women."

Maggie dives into the history to examine how doctors, coaches, sports associations, and the media fought hard to keep women out of sports. They misreported what really happened, lied about races, and perpetuated medical myths that simply weren't true.

But it's time to learn about all the surprising moments you might not have known from the Olympics and the history of women's sports. Like the female athlete pioneers, including:

  • Stamatis Rovithi, who actually ran the marathon at the very first modern Olympics in 1896
  • Diane Leather, who was the first woman to break the 5-minute mile
  • Alice Milliat, who started a separate Women’s Olympic Games
  • Jasmin Paris, who was the first woman to finish the Barkley Marathons

Where we are now is a product of where we came from, and still shapes things today.

Join the FREE Women's Sports Fan Club: fanclub.feisty.co

Sign up to Receive The Feisty 40+ Newsletter:

https://www.feistymenopause.com/blog/Feisty-40-plus

Sign up to Receive The Feist Newsletter:

https://www.womensperformance.com/the-feist

Follow us on Instagram:

@feisty_womens_performance

Feisty Media Website:

https://livefeisty.com/

https://www.womensperformance.com/

Support our Partners:

PILLAR Performance: use code FEISTY for 15% off first-purchases at https://pillarperformance.shop/, or https://thefeed.com/ for North American listeners.

Hettas: Use code FEISTY20 for 20% off at https://hettas.com/

Tifosi Optics: Use code FM20! for 20% off at https://tifosioptics.com/

The Amino Co: Shop Feisty's Favorite 100% Science-Backed Amino Acid Supplements. Enter code PERFORMANCE at Aminoco.com/PERFORMANCE to Save 30% + receive a FREE gift for new purchasers!

MOTTIV: Get two months of full premium access with the code FEISTY at mymottiv.com

  continue reading

152 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Quick Reference Guide