Run, Atalanta, Run: You Do Not Run Alone
It is a pleasure to have the opportunity to respond to Professor
Stimpson's paper entitled "The Atalanta Syndrome: Women, Sports, and
Cultural Values." Professor Stimpson touched upon many of the struggles
women have historically faced and continue to face. I will respond to
Professor Stimpson from my personal experience as a feminist physical
educator and athletic administrator. The main point I would like to
make, and I am sure Professor Stimpson would agree, is that women have
come a long way, but we still have a long way to go.
Yes, the Atalanta syndrome exists for women in sport, but it is not
as bad as it used to be. For many women today, physical activity is an
accepted part of their lifestyle, and they include fitness, sports, and
outdoor activities into their daily lives. Women engage in physical
activity to relieve stress, ward off disease, and improve mental,
emotional, and physical health.
One of the joys in my life is that every day I see women's lives
enhanced through physical activity. We have long believed at Mount
Holyoke College that physical education is an important part of the
liberal arts curriculum. Even before it was in fashion for women to
exercise we were encouraging and even expecting women to engage in daily
physical activity. So highly did Mary Lyon, our founder, regard physical
activity that she required all students to walk daily for exercise.
Lyon's 1839 and 1840 catalogue stated that "young Ladies do not study
during regular hours of recreation and exercise. Those who enjoy bodily
idleness, enjoy sin."[1]
Even today, we continue to offer a broad physical education program
that includes over 45 different fitness, sports, and dance activities.
We are one of the few higher education institutions that require three
semesters of physical education as part of the core curriculum. While
approximately 18 percent of our students are involved in intercollegiate
athletics, we still have our own "Atalantas" arriving on campus each
year. Even today, many of the women who attend Mount Holyoke lack basic
bodily awareness, coordination, and fitness. Often our international
students come from cultures where they are not encouraged (or in some
cases, even allowed) to engage in sports or physical activity. Some
students have not had the financial means or parental support to pursue
active lifestyles or youth sport experiences. For these students,
physical education often begins as a challenge and ends as a liberating
experience, not only for their bodies but for their minds as well. These
young women start off as uncoordinated and lacking fitness at the
beginning of the term and depart at the end of the semester stronger and
armed with skills that will enable them to be active for a lifetime.
Over 50 percent of our students take physical education courses above
and beyond the requirement, which is a clear indication that women
understand and want the benefits of healthy, active lifestyles.
The world of intercollegiate athletics clearly continues to
illustrate the Atalanta Syndrome. As Professor Stimpson notes, Title IX
made new athletic opportunities available to girls and women at all
levels, but we are still far from reaching equity in high school and
college sports. Since the passage of Title IX 33 years ago, female
interscholastic athletic participation has increased by 875 percent, and
female college athletic participation has increased by 437 percent. This
is great news, but high school females still have 1.17 million (41
percent) fewer participation opportunities than their male counterparts,
and college females have 54,557 (34 percent) fewer participation
opportunities than their male counterparts.[2]
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