Shipwreck in the rowing sport community in 1902: reflections on life and death in sport

People usually start thinking about death when something tragic happens, including in the sport context. At the beginning of 20th century, in South Brazil, four rowers died while they practiced their sport, coming back from an excursion to an island near to Porto Alegre, the capital city of Rio Gran...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carolina Fernandes da Silva, Irena Martínková, Janice Zarpellon Mazo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Karolinum Press 2016-09-01
Series:Acta Universitatis Carolinae: Kinanthropologica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.karolinum.cz/doi/10.14712/23366052.2016.6
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spelling doaj-cebf0db8f497431286d780ca59e300182020-11-25T03:00:56ZengKarolinum PressActa Universitatis Carolinae: Kinanthropologica1212-14282336-60522016-09-01521859710.14712/23366052.2016.63949Shipwreck in the rowing sport community in 1902: reflections on life and death in sportCarolina Fernandes da SilvaIrena MartínkováJanice Zarpellon MazoPeople usually start thinking about death when something tragic happens, including in the sport context. At the beginning of 20th century, in South Brazil, four rowers died while they practiced their sport, coming back from an excursion to an island near to Porto Alegre, the capital city of Rio Grande do Sul, where they lived. Following the tragedy, the newspapers published details, both of the tragedy itself, and the ensuing commotion of society, with reflections about life, its fragility and death. This sporting tragedy is a suitable example for trying to understand the way we think about death in sport, given its vast newspaper coverage and the effort to remember the event throughout the 20th century. The interpretation of newspaper sources and reflections on the event will also be considered through the lens of the philosophy of existence of Martin Heidegger. The sources revealed that the shipwreck tragedy made it possible for people to realize that being mortal affects us existentially – that we can never return back to this moment (it is fleeting, it is here and then gone), that we have to make choices that we cannot take back, and that we ourselves are finite beings.http://www.karolinum.cz/doi/10.14712/23366052.2016.6sporthistoryphilosophy of existenceHeideggerdeathrowingswimming
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carolina Fernandes da Silva
Irena Martínková
Janice Zarpellon Mazo
spellingShingle Carolina Fernandes da Silva
Irena Martínková
Janice Zarpellon Mazo
Shipwreck in the rowing sport community in 1902: reflections on life and death in sport
Acta Universitatis Carolinae: Kinanthropologica
sport
history
philosophy of existence
Heidegger
death
rowing
swimming
author_facet Carolina Fernandes da Silva
Irena Martínková
Janice Zarpellon Mazo
author_sort Carolina Fernandes da Silva
title Shipwreck in the rowing sport community in 1902: reflections on life and death in sport
title_short Shipwreck in the rowing sport community in 1902: reflections on life and death in sport
title_full Shipwreck in the rowing sport community in 1902: reflections on life and death in sport
title_fullStr Shipwreck in the rowing sport community in 1902: reflections on life and death in sport
title_full_unstemmed Shipwreck in the rowing sport community in 1902: reflections on life and death in sport
title_sort shipwreck in the rowing sport community in 1902: reflections on life and death in sport
publisher Karolinum Press
series Acta Universitatis Carolinae: Kinanthropologica
issn 1212-1428
2336-6052
publishDate 2016-09-01
description People usually start thinking about death when something tragic happens, including in the sport context. At the beginning of 20th century, in South Brazil, four rowers died while they practiced their sport, coming back from an excursion to an island near to Porto Alegre, the capital city of Rio Grande do Sul, where they lived. Following the tragedy, the newspapers published details, both of the tragedy itself, and the ensuing commotion of society, with reflections about life, its fragility and death. This sporting tragedy is a suitable example for trying to understand the way we think about death in sport, given its vast newspaper coverage and the effort to remember the event throughout the 20th century. The interpretation of newspaper sources and reflections on the event will also be considered through the lens of the philosophy of existence of Martin Heidegger. The sources revealed that the shipwreck tragedy made it possible for people to realize that being mortal affects us existentially – that we can never return back to this moment (it is fleeting, it is here and then gone), that we have to make choices that we cannot take back, and that we ourselves are finite beings.
topic sport
history
philosophy of existence
Heidegger
death
rowing
swimming
url http://www.karolinum.cz/doi/10.14712/23366052.2016.6
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AT janicezarpellonmazo shipwreckintherowingsportcommunityin1902reflectionsonlifeanddeathinsport
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