Violence in North-American Indian Sports Games Cover Image

Violence in North-American Indian Sports Games
Violence in North-American Indian Sports Games

Author(s): Fabrice Delsahut
Subject(s): Anthropology, Sports Studies
Published by: Trivent Publishing
Keywords: Anthropology; Games; Lacrosse; North-American Indians; Rituals; Sports; Violence;

Summary/Abstract: North American Indians have often been perceived as violent, bloodthirsty human beings. The horrified fascination exerted by this violence on the European imagination takes hold of all historical accounts and lies at the heart of the smallest social productions. The sports games, whose imposing corpus is intriguing to the colonists, are also perceived as a cultural element of this gratuitous violence, a biological one, even, as inherent to their “wild nature”. And yet, far from being instinctual, this violence takes on a ritual and propitiatory dimension that is at the same time at the service of private interests, but also, and especially so, of tribal ones. By taking possession of the lacrosse game through its institutionalization, Canadians hope to control the violence of this emblematic game-ritual. Despite a deep transformation of the game, the instinctual manifestations in the human relationships that are supposed to decline through the internalization of restrictions subsist. The original game still seems to express itself through this violence-based relationship, no matter how codified. Drawing on archives ranging from missiological writings to anthropological documents, as well as on recent academic studies, this article tries to dispel the defining halo of a violence sometimes confused with distinct forms of aggressivity.

  • Issue Year: 2/2018
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 215-237
  • Page Count: 23
  • Language: English