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2013 | 59 | 1 | 5-10

Article title

Sport and Philosophy of Hospitality: Three Questions on How to Rethink Contemporary Sport Education in Light of Gift and Peace

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The ancient Olympic Games were held in spaces and places consecrated for hospitality, to xénia, a Greek word that means “gifts” but also something that refers to and belongs to strangers and foreigners. Foreigners from every part of Greece met in Olympia to celebrate the agón. In this place, a stranger or a foreigner (hostis in Latin), probably a former enemy, became a friend because he was both guest and host (hospes in Latin) in the sanctuary-town, which belonged to the gods and to all of the Greeks, who recognized themselves in its spirit. This mechanism of hospitality formed the basis of the Olympic peace system and was the fundamental prerequisite for the celebration of agón. The practice of the agón was therefore made possible by a “gift” but also by “for-giveness” that allowed people to meet and compete. We can conclude that at the base of the Olympic (and Greek) ethics there was the concept of hospitality. Olympia was then the common home of all Greeks, the place where ethics were carried out, were put into practice, and concretely exercised. It is not a pure coincidence that the Greek word “ethics” is linked to the word éthos, which means “house”, “home”. For this reason, ethics can be thought as the art of hosting somebody in our own home and trusting him/her, just as it happened in ancient Olympia during the Olympic Games, which demonstrated that ethics was always a home’s ethics. Therefore, taking into account this cultural and philosophical framework, this study will develop a methodological approach, derived from deconstructionism, which will be applied to concepts that are both ambiguous and semantically rich in meaning, such as “gift”, “forgiveness”, xénos, hostis, and hospes. The first objective of this study is to reflect upon the connection between “gift” and “sport” and show the deep interconnection between the two concepts. The second is to use the model of Greek hospitality at the Olympic Games to deeply rethink sport and contemporary philosophy of sport education in terms of peace and multiculturalism.

Keywords

Publisher

Year

Volume

59

Issue

1

Pages

5-10

Physical description

Dates

published
1 - 10 - 2013
online
20 - 10 - 2013

Contributors

  • University of Rome Foro Italico, Italy
  • University of La Rioja, Spain

References

  • Arnold, P. J. (1997). Sport, ethics and education. London: Cassell.
  • Derrida, J. (2001). On Cosmopolitism and Forgiveness. London: Routledge.
  • Derrida, J. (2000). Of Hospitality. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Frankl, V.E. (1975). Zur Anthropologie des sports /On anthropology of sport/. In V.E Frankl (Ed.), AnthropologischeGrundlagen der Psychotherapie /Anthropological foundations of psychotherapy/ (pp. 65-75). Bern/Stuttgart/Wien: Hans Huber.
  • Georgiadis, K. (2009). Sport as a “battlefield” of peace. In K. Georgiadis & A. Syrigos (Eds), Olympic truce: sport as aplatform for peace (pp. 51-55). Athens: International Olympic Truce Centre.
  • Isidori, E., Müller, A., Kaya, S. (2012). The Referee as Educator: Hermeneutical and Pedagogical Perspectives. Physical Culture And Sport. Studies And Research, 56, 5-11.
  • Lucy, N. (2004). A Derrida Dictionary. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
  • Reid, H.L. (2011). Athletics and philosophy in the ancient world: contests of virtue. London-New York: Routledge.[WoS]
  • Reid, H.L. (2006). Olympic sport and its lessons for peace. Journal of the Philosophy of Sport, 33, 205-214.
  • Vegetti, M. (2010). L’etica degli antichi /Ethics in antiquity/. Roma-Bari: Laterza.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.-psjd-doi-10_2478_pcssr-2013-0017
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