Reprinted  with kind permission of the author from “NO CONTEST”  -   Houghton Mifflin Company – New York
pag. 143-147
AGGRESSION 
 
 What is the relationship between competition  and aggression? On one level, the question makes little sense since the two are  not really distinct phenomena that can be related: competition is a kind  of aggression. In the preceding section, I tried to explore what it means to  try to beat someone. The arrangement is by its very nature a struggle or (depending  on how one uses the word) an aggressive enterprise. Thus Horney was able to  write: "Hostility is inherent in every intense competition, since the  victory of one of the competitors implies the defeat of the other."
 If  there is a connection to be drawn, then, it is only between trying to defeat  someone and trying to do him harm beyond what is necessary for victory. The  mediator between these two actions presumably would be feelings of hostility -  which invariably attend competition at some level. Morton Deutsch writes as follows: 
In a competitive relationship, one is predisposed to cathect the other negatively,  to have a suspicious, hostile, exploitative attitude toward the other, to be  psychologically closed to the other, to be aggressive and defensive toward the  other, to seek advantage and superiority for self and disadvantage and  inferiority for the other, to see the other as opposed to oneself and basically  different, and so on. One is also predisposed to expect the other to have the  same orientation.
 Indeed, hostility is practically  indistinguishable from intentional competition, so an individual with this  orientation will likely seek out competitive encounters. To this extent, the  act of competition can be a consequence of hostility. But social scientists  have been more concerned with the reverse proposition - the question of whether  competition leads people to feel more hostile and  ultimately, to act more aggressive.   
Once upon a time, theorists speculated that participation in or controlled  exposure to competitive sports or other aggressive behavior would drain off  one's reservoir of aggression. This came to be known as the "catharsis" theory, after Aristotle's notion that one can be purged of  unpleasant emotions by watching tragic dramas. Freud and the ethologist  Konrad  Lorenz  were two of the chief proponents of this view, and it is not a coincidence that  both believed aggression was innate rather than learned and spontaneous rather  than reactive: we naturally need to vent our aggressions, and it is best to do  so where it can do little harm, such as by playing sports. The substitutive  satisfaction of competition thus was said to reduce aggression.
 There are few beliefs so widely  held by the general public that have' been so decisively refuted by the  evidence. The catharsis theory by now has no leg to stand on, particularly with  respect to the question of sports. Even Lorenz told an interviewer in 1974 that  he had developed "strong doubts whether watching aggressive behavior even  in the guise of sport has any cathartic effect at all." And the wellknown psychoanalyst  Bruno Bettelheim conceded that "competitive or spectator sports ..... raise  aggressive feelings of competition to the boiling point”.
 Watching others be aggressive does  not discharge our own aggressiveness. What seems to happen instead is  straightforward modeling: We learnto  be aggressive. Our restraints against aggression are lowered. 
Whatever  explanation we devise for this effect, however, one study after another has  failed to show any catharsis effect. 
  . Athletes were found to become more aggressive over the course of a  season, as measured by personality tests. Another study found the same thing  for high school football players.
  · Third graders who were frustrated by  experimenters did not become any less aggressive when they engaged in  aggressive play afterward. (On the other hand, those children who had the  frustrating behavior explained to them became significantly less aggressive.)
  · Elementary-school-aged boys were more  likely to shove or hit their peers if they had watched a boxing film. 
  · A cross-cultural study revealed that "where we find warlike behavior we  typically find combative sports and where war is relatively rare combative  sports tend to be absent. This refutes the hypothesis that combative sports are  alternatives to war as discharge channels of accumulated aggressive  tension." If the catharsis theory were true, sports and war would be  inversely  related 
  across cultures in fact they are directly related.
  Those social scientists who have reviewed or conducted the research on catharsis speak with one  voice. "Innumerable studies of aggression in children have illustrated  that attempts to reduce aggression through  the use of aggressive and vigorous play therapy have the opposite effect....  Sports participation may heighten aggressive tendencies," says one.  "Engaging in aggressive sports or observing aggressive sports ...  typically lead[s] to increased rather than decreased aggression,"  says another."Participation in competitive, aggressive sports ... may more  rightfully be viewed as a disinhibition training that ultimately promotes  violent reactions," says a third. And from yet another source: "The  balance of evidence . . . is that sports involvement may heighten arousal,  produce instances of aggressive behaviors and their reward, and provide a  context in which the emulation of such behaviors is condoned.
  Faced with such evidence,  proponents of competition can no longer use catharsis to justify the aggressiveness  of sports. Their last refuge is, as usual, the myth of "human  nature." Michael Novak, for instance, Asserts that "the human animal  is a warlike animal" and that sports merely "dramatize  conflict." But whether or not we are unavoidably aggressive - and the data  suggest that we are not - one cannot argue in good faith that sports merely  dramatize conflict. The studies demonstrate that athletic competition not only  fails to reduce aggression, as catharsis theory would predict, but actually  encourages it. This is not really surprising given that sport represents a kind  of circumscribed warfare - something pointed out not only by such critics as  George Orwell, who called it "war minus the shooting, but also by  generals: It was Wellington who said that the battle of Waterloo was "won  on the playing fields of Harrow and Eton." It was Douglas MacArthur who  said: "Upon the fields of friendly strife are sown the seeds that, upon  other fields, on other days, will bear the fruits of victory." And it was Eisenhower  who said that "the true mission of American sports is to prepare young  people for war The point is not that athletes will rush to enlist, but that  athletic competition both consists in and promotes warlike aggression.
There have been numerous anecdotal  and experimental accounts of the relationship between violence and sports, but  probably the most famous investigation was the series of studies conducted  between 1949 and 1954 by Muzafer Sherif and his colleagues.
In the so-called  "Robbers' Cave" experiment (named after the area of Oklahoma where it  took place), the researchers took a group of normal eleven- and twelve-year-old  boys at a Boy Scout camp and divided them into two teams. These teams, the  Rattlers and the Eagles, lived for three weeks in separate cabins and were  pitted against each other, in such competitive games as baseball, football, and  tug-of-war - with prizes for the winning team. The hypothesis was that  situations where one group could be successful only at the expense of the other  (i.e., competition) would promote generalized hostility and aggressive acts This  is exactly what happened. The boys began taunting and insulting each other, in  some cases turning against good friends who were now on the opposing team. They  burned each other's banners, planned raids, threw food, and attacked each other  after the games and al night. It is important to realize that there was no  difference between the members of the two teams; they were in all respects  homogeneous. Only the fact of structural competition can account for this hostility. 
  The practice of dividing children into teams for a series of competitive  encounters is still common in summer camps. These teams often are identified by  colors, and the affair is aptly known as "Color War." It is a  dreadful spectacle, a study in humiliation and rage, which I witnessed over  several years as a camp counselor. Even very young children understand that the  only thing that matters during the War is the relative standing of their team.  Everything must be sacrificed for the Blues or Whites, and fervent loyalties  develop as soon as the arbitrary team assignments are announced. Erstwhile  friends on the other side are now met with a coldness that often erupts into  nastiness. In the camp where I worked, the competition extended beyond sports:  writing cheers and participating in a sort of quiz bowl insured that  nonathletic youngsters, too, could use their skills in rivalrous fashion.  (Indeed, one regularly finds hostility boiling up in chess matches, interscholastic  debates, and any other sort of recreational competition one cares to mention.  Athletes have no patent on aggression.) 
Competition does not promote aggression merely on the part of participants.  Fan violence is a frequent companion to sports, from high school students  pelting the opposing team's bus with rocks to the death of three hundred soccer  fans in a 1964 brawl in Peru. In 1971, sixty-six people died in similar fashion  in Glasgow; in 1985, it was thirty-eight in Brussels. Looting and rioting  regularly occur in V.S. cities following a hometown victory in the Super  Bowl or World Series. After each such incident, pundits and political leaders  scratch their heads and try to imagine what could have caused such  "senseless" behavior. The Brussels riot, begun by Liverpool youths, produced  hypotheses ranging from alcohol to the British character. The one cause that  was not considered was the effect of competition itself. In any case, the  frequency of such behavior on the part of fans again disproves the catharsis  theory. "There are so many cases of spectators becoming violent as a  result of an emotionally pitched game," says Terry Orlick, "that we  have to wonder why the notion persists that the viewers will lessen their  aggressive inclinations by seeing the game. Clearly someone forgot to tell  these fans that watching highly competitive or aggressive sports is supposed to  subdue their aggressive tendencies."
It would be a  mistake to confine a discussion of competitively inspired  aggression to sports. Games, after all, are  supposed to matter less than  the rest of  life; they are offered as something playful and fun. In  other arenas, where competition is in deadly  earnest, there may be  fewer displays of  brute violence but there is at least as much hostility.  Joseph Wax's reflections on education are  worth quoting at length: 
  One must marvel at the intellectual quality of  a teacher who can't  understand why  children assault one another in the hallway, playground,  and city street, when in the classroom the  highest accolades are  reserved for those  who have beaten their peers. In many subtle and   some not so subtle ways, teachers demonstrate that what children learo  means less than that they triumph over their  classmates. Is this not  assault? ...  Classroom defeat is only the pebble that creates widening  ripples of hostility. lt is  self-perpetuating. lt is reinforced by peer censure,  parental disapprovai, and loss of self-concept.  If the classroom is a  model, and if that  classroom models competition, assault in the hallways  should surprise no one.”