The Architecture of the Stage: Merit, Spectacle, and System in the Modern Olympic Games
Navigating the Tension Between Competitive Purity and Institutional Reality The modern Olympic Games operate at a complex intersection of athletic merit, cultural expression, and commercial imperatives, revealing a persistent tension between aspirational purity and institutional reality. Rather than functioning as a neutral measure of sporting excellence, the Olympic system represents a negotiated equilibrium that balances fundamentally incompatible objectives. Disciplines blending athleticism with aesthetics employ hybrid scoring frameworks, translating subjective artistry into rule-bound evaluation, while institutional mechanics and historical path dependence continuously shape program expansion. Hosting economics, media logic, and geopolitical signaling further layer the competition, transforming official medal tables into proxies for national system efficiency rather than individual athletic superiority. Ultimately, the Olympics function as a multi-layered architecture where st...