The Spirituality of Sport and the Role of the Athlete in the Tennis Essays of David Foster Wallace

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: King, Kyle R.
In: Communication & Sport, 6, 2018, 2, p. 219-238
published:
SAGE Publications
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
Physical Description: 219-238
ISSN: 2167-4795
2167-4809
DOI: 10.1177/2167479516680190
published in: Communication & Sport
Language: English
Subjects:
Collection: SAGE Publications (CrossRef)
Table of Contents

<jats:p> The well-known novelist and creative writer David Foster Wallace (1962–2008) belongs to a select group of “occasional sportswriters” whose writings about sport have influenced cultural discourse about tennis and animated future sports writing. Wallace uses three rhetorical tactics—providing knowledge to the reader as confidant, making meaning out of the athletic cliché, and translating the form of professional tennis into prose—that establish his cultural authority on tennis while positioning the athlete as a transcendent spiritual practitioner. This characterization redefines dominant understandings of the athlete’s relationship to religion and the spectator’s relationship to the athlete, while discarding the possibility of recognizing the athlete as citizen. </jats:p>