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Distributed for Reaktion Books

Open Play

The Case for Feminist Sport

Distributed for Reaktion Books

Open Play

The Case for Feminist Sport

“This courageous book should spark a revolution in sport.”—Caster Semenya • “An articulate and convincing case that the segregation of women’s sports functions less as a benefit to women than a means of propping up patriarchal systems. It’s a trenchant, provocative take on a hot-button issue.”—Publishers Weekly

A thought-provoking manifesto arguing for the end of gender segregation in athletics.

 
Sheree Bekker and Stephen Mumford argue that the category of “women’s sports” is not the feminist win some would have you believe. Instead, the segregation of women in sports is just one of the many ways in which women are told to expect less from society. Women had to fight to be included in sports in the first place, and are now only included under far less favorable terms than those enjoyed by men. There are better ways to ensure safety and fairness, the authors make clear, than segregation by gender. And this matters deeply: ending gender segregation would encourage a more equitable distribution of resources, increase women’s participation in sports, and challenge outdated, sexist myths about women and their bodies.

180 pages | 5.43 x 8.5 | © 2025

Gender and Sexuality

Sport and Recreation


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Reviews

"In their punchy new book Open Play, the academics Bekker and Mumford argue that women’s sports are something else entirely: a cage. They get the appeal. They’re fans themselves. But to put women and girls in their own category, the authors insist, is to limit their possibilities. . . . [Bekker and Mumford] offer up a radical remedy for this inequality: Abolish the gender divide at all levels of sports. Sound outlandish? They make a more compelling case than you might imagine."

David Scharfenberg | Boston Globe

"An articulate and convincing case that the segregation of women’s sports functions less as a benefit to women than a means of propping up patriarchal systems. It’s a trenchant, provocative take on a hot-button issue."

Publishers Weekly

"Assumptions about human performance turn out to be the losers. Rich in historical examples and scientific research, this groundbreaking book highlights insidious sociopolitical factors that have impacted the ways women and girls have been excluded from or minimized by sport, as well as the legal, institutional, and social pressures that have hindered women from finishing strong in the race toward equity."

Library Journal

"Imagine a world where anyone was free to reach their full potential playing the sport they love; where open competition replaced discrimination and exclusion, and where athletes were judged by their performances on the field rather than their conformity with gender norms. Bekker and Mumford show us how to get there, and how far we have to go. This courageous book should spark a revolution in sport."

Caster Semenya

"Sport has been in desperate need of a fresh, nuanced approach to gender, one which has women, nonbinary, and trans people at its core. Open Play challenges the patriarchal system that has dictated women’s participation in sport around the world. Its philosophy is simple yet revolutionary amongst the status quo of so-called 'feminist' approaches to sport. This book is not just a must-read, it should become foundational in the future of women’s sport from the grassroots to professional levels."

Flo Lloyd-Hughes, sports writer and broadcaster

"Open Play is a necessary intervention in the contentious discussion over women, gender, and sport. Bekker and Mumford immerse us in the realities of ‘women’s sport’ and convincingly make the case for a new ‘feminist sport.’"

Agustin Fuentes, professor of anthropology, Princeton University

"In Open Play, Bekker and Mumford offer a thought-provoking reexamination of the role of women in sport—challenging not only the term ‘women’s sports’ but the framework through which we view gender and sport. Provocative and necessary in a time of global debates on gender and athleticism, they challenge the often-promoted narrative that women need to be 'protected' from men in competitive sport. Instead, Bekker and Mumford perceptively reveal how current sporting structures, despite numerous counterexamples, continue to reinforce gendered power imbalances. Thoroughly researched, sharply argued, and accessible, Open Play reimagines sport as a space for genuine equality where both women, and men, can excel."

Anna Baeth, PhD, director of research, Athlete Ally

Table of Contents

Preface

1. The Sports Bra
2. Sport is a Feminist Issue
3. Policing Women’s Sport
4. Being in Your Body
5. Beyond the Binary
6. The Future of Feminist Sport

Afterword

References
Further Reading
Acknowledgements

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