When American figure skater Evan Lysacek won the gold medal at the 2010 Olympics, he was the only man on the podium who had not attempted a quadruple jump in either of his two skating programs. The silver medalist, 2006 Olympic Champion Evgeni Plushenko of Russia, was quick to point out that “a quad is a quad. If an Olympic champion doesn’t do a quad, well I don’t know… Now it’s not men’s figure skating, it’s dancing.” Plushenko’s website later proclaimed (though the claim was soon redacted) that his superior performance had earned him a “platinum” medal. Figure skaters and others who heard his comment understood this wasn’t just sour grapes; by questioning Lysacek’s jumping ability, Plushenko was also questioning his manhood.
As Daniel, a former singles and pairs skater, knows from personal experience, when you look below the surface of figure skating, a coded gendering of the sport emerges. Figure skating has both athletic and artistic components, and traditionally these have been apportioned to men and women, respectively. Men are expected to be able to land enormous jumps. Women, on the other hand, are more likely to grab one of their feet and pull it up behind their heads, sometimes while spinning fast enough to set off a nose-bleed, as Mirai Nagasu did in Vancouver. Women’s programs also emphasize a great deal of emotion when they skate, while men are expected to display their athletic strength and power.
This is not to say that women are not expected to jump or that men can be soulless automata, but there are lower expectations for each in the other gender’s territory. A male skater who doesn’t emote passionately can be forgiven if he has a fantastic triple axel, and a woman can even win the Olympics with jumps that aren’t fully rotated. Artistry and flexibility are where women are expected to excel, while boys strive to jump higher and rotate more. To this day, only one woman (Japan’s Miki Ando) has landed a clean quadruple jump in competition, while it has become a mainstay of men’s event. This video shows Ando’s jump, at a 2002 competition:
In the aftermath of his silver platinum silver medal finish in Vancouver, Plushenko questioned the qualifications of Evan Lysacek to win gold without a quad. Aside from being poor sportsmanship, his approach highlighted the deep association of jumps with male figure skating. Though, in the women’s event, Mao Asada completed the technically difficult triple axel on three separate occasions, no fuss was made over her second-place finish behind the ethereal Kim Yu-Na. Kim has strong jumps, to be sure, but what sets her apart from her competitors is that she skates in a way that is graceful, balletic and undeniably feminine.
Ironically, one of the most promising things about a young Evgeni Plushenko when he arrived on the international skating scene in 1997 was his blending of artistry and athleticism. His style was avant-garde and overwrought, and his jumps were magnificent; he had, in skating parlance,”the whole package.” It might seem excessive to map gender onto his performances, but he is famous for being one of the only men to perform the Biellmann spin, in which the skater grabs the blade of one skate and pulls it up behind the top of his or her head.
This was a clear and unabashed case of gender-bending, as the spin had previously been the province of women. The figure skating world, after being sufficiently impressed by the flexibility of his hips, shrugged and moved on. No one thought any less of him for doing a “girly” spin.
Compare this to the skating world’s reaction to two-time Olympic gold medalist Katarina Witt, who was often said to skate “like a man.” Witt had big jumps (and big thighs to go with them), and skated to the soundtracks of epic movies, a practice that was usually reserved for men, while other women tended to skate to classical ballet suites. Witt’s artistic style was also not typical of women skaters: while her competitors demonstrated flowing, balletic arm movements to match their floaty chiffon skating dresses, Witt opted for stronger, cleaner arm movements and famously skated in leggings and a tunic in a program set to music from Robin Hood. She also skated with a stoic bearing that was similar to that of Canadian Elvis Stojko, who won the silver medal in Lillehammer in 1994.
Despite the popular perception of figure skating as a uniformly “girly” sport, there exists within the figure skating world a unique and nuanced code for constructing and understanding gender. In the figure skating world, as in the rest of our culture, that code changes over time, with different representations of masculinity and femininity being rewarded, marked down, or phased out entirely as the sport evolves. And as Plushenko’s comments about Lysacek demonstrated, figure skating’s coding of gender can be invoked by skaters trash-talking their rivals in subtle, but complicated, ways. As yet, Plushenko has made no comment on Lysacek’s upcoming appearance on “Dancing with the Stars,” but it’s not hard to imagine what he might have to say.
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Chloe Angyal is a Contributor at Feministing.com, where she writes about gender in popular culture. She is also a failed figure skater. Daniel Eison is a former nationally-ranked pairs and singles skater who retired in 2005. He is not a failed feminist.
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Gender differences in figure skating are also institutionalized in the form of costume requirements. Women are required to wear dresses, while men are not allowed to wear leggings or sleeveless outfits.
UPDATE: Reader Jeff says,
This isn’t true anymore; “this rule was repealed in 2004, allowing women to wear tights, trousers, or unitards” [1] ([1] http://www.frogsonice.com/skateweb/faq/rules.shtml)
Thanks for the correction!
Related posts: Johnny Weir and Canadian skating gets tough.
Comments 41
Deaf Indian Muslim Anarchist — March 31, 2010
wow, that was really interesting... I wasn't even aware of the differences in ice skating between men and women. I respect ice skaters and I think it looks like one of the most difficult sports to master.
I wonder, if some people think Johnny Weir skates like a female skater?? I love to watch him on the ice.
Scapino — March 31, 2010
Seems like a lot of the problems stem from the fact that there are basically two different sports (artsy skating and jumpy skating) and the Olympic committee has decreed that only men can do jumpy and only women can do artsy.
They should rename the two competitions and open them to both genders. It's kind of dumb to have a jumpy skater and an artsy skater competing against each other in what is ostensibly the same sport. It's like mustard-based and tomato-based BBQ sauces being in the same competition; the results are going to be based on which style each specific judge prefers. It's not apples to apples.
Jeff Kaufman — March 31, 2010
Women are required to wear dresses
This isn't true anymore; "this rule was repealed in 2004, allowing women to wear tights, trousers, or unitards" [1]
[1] http://www.frogsonice.com/skateweb/faq/rules.shtml
Mint — March 31, 2010
I watched a skate event featuring Plushenko on YouTube where he repeatedly switched his costume (while skating) from a "manly" tuxedo-like outfit to a "feminine" dress. The jacket of his costume folded down to become a skirt and revealed a top like a corset when he took it off. He was able to slide it back on again and go back into "male" mode while he was skating. It was to go along with some funky music that had male and female voices speaking to each other, and he would switch his outfit accordingly to imitate the voice that was speaking. I could not understand the language, so I have no idea what the male and female voices were talking about. Still, I thought it was interesting that he was able to skate in any sort of dress at all, the audience loved it.
Sadie — March 31, 2010
I'm afraid your entire argument is refuted by the figure skater you mention in passing, Elvis Stojko. Stojko continually lost to lesser technical skaters because he wasn't "artistic" enough, and was often subtly criticized for being too manly in his skating (not taking ballet lessens for example). Although in 2010 the more artistic, complete skater won over the more technical, in every men's Olympic event that I can remember, at least back to 1988, the more artistic (generally Russian) skaters have won over the more technical (generally North American). What makes the Plushenko/Lysacek situation special is that the nationalities were reversed. While on the other hand in the women's event more technical (or "jumpy") skaters have won over more artistic skaters, such as Tara Lipinski beating Michelle Kwan or Oksana Biual (sp?) beating Nancy Kerrigan. You can prove anything if your data selection is biased.
Meg — March 31, 2010
Skating is one of these great, ambivalent, liminal spaces, where the qualities that lead to success are almost exactly at odds with the super-gendered commentary around the sport. I do, personally, wish they would merge men and womens skating into one event, since I'd hope it would get rid of the "gender-deviant enough by no more!" tightrope skaters seem to need to walk.
I've also compared it to a Russian ballet I attended once, where I watched a male dance tromp on stage in a hyper-masculine stride, flit about like a little butterfly, and then tromp back off.
It's also interesting to me that Johnny Weir lost on the subjective artistic marks rather than the technical marks. He would have done better in a purely technical scoring system, despite being characterized as the emotive, emotional, artsy skater. It seems like the judges end up partially being the gender police.
johanna — March 31, 2010
For anyone who wants to read about this in more depth, I'd recommend the book Culture on Ice: Figure Skating & Cultural Meaning by Ellyn Kestnbaum; it's a fascinating read.
m — March 31, 2010
excellent post!
beth — March 31, 2010
Adding bits to jeff's comment: The pairs and Individual skate only requires that men wear trousers, no tights, and that all clothing be appropriate and not "garish", and no excessive nudity.
The ice dancing rules do still require the women to wear skirts & men trousers.
http://www.isu.org/vsite/vfile/page/fileurl/0,11040,4844-191593-208816-140518-0-file,00.pdf
Kirsten — March 31, 2010
As a sort-of aside, I found it interesting that within one sentence in this article, women are referred to as women and men as.....boys:
"Artistry and flexibility are where women are expected to excel, while boys strive to jump higher and rotate more."
In a sense, I think this says something too....
Cyradia — March 31, 2010
While there is A LOT to be said about skating, I don't feel what Plushenko said is central to this subject. And, without being one of his fans, I pretty much agree with him. Being an olympic champion without a quad in 2010 is not more or less manly or womanly, but it's "low standard'.
Also, a bit disappointed about the lack of mention of Surya Bonaly - the first woman to try a quad in competiton (and who kept on trying!). That would have been a better example as to what too many "physical qualities" can do to a woman's skating career...
J — March 31, 2010
I was a big fan of figure skating in my youth (don't really have much time for it anymore) and I remember feeling that the technical aspect of women's skating added to the beauty and was all too often set aside for other aesthetic concerns. There still has been nothing more aesthetically beautiful to me than a well-landed jump, which is one of the most graceful things you can see in figure skating. Form is the basis for true aesthetic mastery.
Nicola — March 31, 2010
As far as comments go regarding male skater's manhoods, it doesn't get much better than all the crap Johnny Weir had to put up with.
http://popwatch.ew.com/2010/02/25/johnny-weir-olympics-gender-example/
That all made me so mad.
And he still didn't get asked to go on the skating tour... even though people who placed lower than him did.
They said it's because they want the show to be "family friendly".
I guess flamboyant and maybe-gay is just not family friendly.
Abigail — March 31, 2010
Not quite the same topic, but here's a commercial from the 2002 Olympics that drove me nuts as an adolescent: http://adland.tv/commercials/coca-cola-coke-french-figure-skater-olympics-2002-030-usa
anonymousss — April 1, 2010
On the subject of music: the first thing that came to mind was that gold medalist Kim Yu-Na did her spectacular short program to a James Bond medley. I also wonder what the evidence is that spinning with your foot behind your head is generally perceived as "artistic" rather than "athletic."
There's lots of gender coding in the sport (it's not for nothing that they're divided into "men's" and "ladies'" programs) but I wonder about your specific claims.
Bilbo — April 2, 2010
Where will we be in 10 years? 20 years?
Lorraine — April 2, 2010
Ah, c'mon, gay or straight, real men play hockey.
Josh — April 6, 2010
lol Lorraine, well said.
Penny — July 25, 2010
Strange that Evan Lysacek is being presented as some sort of demasculated victim in the world of male figure skating. Aside from Plushenko's bitter comments, Lysacek is almost NEVER questioned as being a man's man or American figure skating's "great heterosexual hope." He is most often criticized for his robotic demeanor and lack of artistry in his programs, not for his athletic ability. Artistry is still very important in male figure skating; it's not all EXXTREME jumps as the author seems to suggest.
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[...] the artistry and athleticism looks slightly different for each gender. As Daniel Eison and I wrote last year at Sociological Images, “Women’s programs emphasize a great deal of emotion when they [...]
timlittlepublisher — January 2, 2014
I don't figure skate but I enjoy ice skating outdoors during the winter months in Michigan sometimes I get some glare from the sun and need
randolph-sunglasses
Truman Golden — February 25, 2014
Lysacek definitely did not deserve gold with that performance. it's ridiculous to even put him on the podium with a 1980's performance.
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Bryan — November 30, 2021
Gender is inherent in all sports. News flash , god or your creator as a hunter gatherer understood the difference in sex has different roles or advantages. Fems need to appreciate the beauty of sex, or "gender".. then individual performance is then properly judged without a chromosome or two missing between their ears or legs. Sex is beautiful. Spin around and arch the back.. nice. ;)
Cheese Stands — June 30, 2022
Met the man who was the male adult USFS champion somewhere between 2015 and 2018 (sorry, didn't ask), and he said he destroyed his back during a competition doing a Biellmann spiral when he heard a CRACK. This was completely irresponsible, considering the latitude to make points another way. Most sports governing bodies have decided to have gender rules based on testosterone supplementation or suppression, but I haven't seen any of them address the role of estrogen in flexibility.