Review Article

Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and their Battle Scars

Volume: 3 Number: 2 December 30, 2024
EN

Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and their Battle Scars

Abstract

This study explores uptake of chivalrous values and potential interactions it may have with athletes’ attitudes towards injury. It focuses more specifically on combat sports that historically align with notions of chivalry and chivalric ideals. Adopting a novel conceptualization of chivalric disposition as a value-complex subject to cultural evolutionary principles, a sample of 81 Maltese athletes, balanced between combative and non-combative disciplines, was surveyed using bespoke scales to measure chivalric disposition and positive injury perception. The findings of an inferential statistical analysis revealed that while subscribing to chivalrous values appears to be ubiquitous among athletes regardless of gender or type of sport, traditional martial arts practitioners may do so to a slightly higher degree. The main finding was a modest but statistically significant correlation between chivalric disposition and positive attitudes toward injury. Combat athletes displayed significantly more positive injury perception, consistent with valorisation of injuries as badges of honour in this particular culture. Various interpretations of the findings are given from both critical sociological and positive psychological perspectives. In terms of gender, the findings show that men and women exhibit similar levels of commitment to chivalrous values, yet, positive attitudes toward injury appears to be uniquely masculine. Intrasexual competition strategies are proposed as a viable explanation in this respect. Avenues for future research are proposed with a view to continuing to develop a deeper understanding of chivalric disposition as a novel construct of interest for researchers in the social sciences, as well as those interested more specifically in the psycho-social aspects of competitive sport.

Keywords

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Exercise and Sports Psychology, History of Sports

Journal Section

Review Article

Publication Date

December 30, 2024

Submission Date

August 23, 2024

Acceptance Date

October 24, 2024

Published in Issue

Year 2024 Volume: 3 Number: 2

APA
Zvicer, N., & Muscat-inglott, M. (2024). Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and their Battle Scars. Journal of Theory and Practice in Sport, 3(2), 1-21. https://izlik.org/JA27ZJ74CF
AMA
1.Zvicer N, Muscat-inglott M. Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and their Battle Scars. JTPS. 2024;3(2):1-21. https://izlik.org/JA27ZJ74CF
Chicago
Zvicer, Nikola, and Matthew Muscat-inglott. 2024. “Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and Their Battle Scars”. Journal of Theory and Practice in Sport 3 (2): 1-21. https://izlik.org/JA27ZJ74CF.
EndNote
Zvicer N, Muscat-inglott M (December 1, 2024) Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and their Battle Scars. Journal of Theory and Practice in Sport 3 2 1–21.
IEEE
[1]N. Zvicer and M. Muscat-inglott, “Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and their Battle Scars”, JTPS, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 1–21, Dec. 2024, [Online]. Available: https://izlik.org/JA27ZJ74CF
ISNAD
Zvicer, Nikola - Muscat-inglott, Matthew. “Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and Their Battle Scars”. Journal of Theory and Practice in Sport 3/2 (December 1, 2024): 1-21. https://izlik.org/JA27ZJ74CF.
JAMA
1.Zvicer N, Muscat-inglott M. Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and their Battle Scars. JTPS. 2024;3:1–21.
MLA
Zvicer, Nikola, and Matthew Muscat-inglott. “Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and Their Battle Scars”. Journal of Theory and Practice in Sport, vol. 3, no. 2, Dec. 2024, pp. 1-21, https://izlik.org/JA27ZJ74CF.
Vancouver
1.Nikola Zvicer, Matthew Muscat-inglott. Chivalric Disposition and Attitudes to Sports Injuries: Combat Athletes and their Battle Scars. JTPS [Internet]. 2024 Dec. 1;3(2):1-21. Available from: https://izlik.org/JA27ZJ74CF