RT Article T1 Strong Women Never Mumble: Female Athlete Attitudes About Sexual Consent JF Journal of interpersonal violence VO 36 IS 1/2 SP 751 OP 780 A1 McGovern, Jen LA English YR 2021 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/174736472X AB Research demonstrating the effect of sports’ hypermasculine culture on athlete attitudes about sexual consent primarily focuses on men. Female athletes routinely engage with the same culture but their beliefs about sexual communication are rarely examined. This study examines the unique ways that athletic norms of hegemonic masculinity intersect with embodied lived experiences to influence female athletes’ perceptions of consent communication. Data were gathered from surveys and focus group interviews at a midsized university in the Northeast. The findings indicate that athletic women place emphasis on confidently saying “no” in ambiguous sexual situations. Data also show that female athletes’ attitudes about sexual consent differ from their nonathletic peers even though both groups experience many of the same sexual pressures. The research demonstrates how athletic women’s gendered practices are constituted by their status as women and as athletes and suggests that future training programs should aim to incorporate perspectives of women athletes. K1 female athletes K1 consent communication K1 campus sexual assault DO 10.1177/0886260517730022