68                                                                    Eliza Pinto Narciso Saltarelli et al.  
                                    Opción, Año 38, Regular No.97 (2022): 47-78                                                                                                             
                                     
                        
                       Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales. FEC-LUZ 
KESSLER  (2017).  When  she  says  that  being  a  woman  “made  it  very 
difficult”  to  advance,  Former  athlete  10  also  corroborates  Scott  and 
Cordeiro (2013) regarding the existence of spaces that are still polarized 
and  hierarchical,  the  lowest  hierarchical  levels  of  which  are  usually 
reserved for women. In addition, when  these women seek to move up 
the hierarchy, there are barriers that try to prevent them from reaching 
the highest levels, i.e., the glass ceiling. The glass ceiling was introduced 
in the 1980s in the United States to describe barriers that are so subtle 
that  they  are  transparent  but  simultaneously  strong  enough  to  make  it 
impossible  for  women  to  reach  the  highest  levels  of  organizational 
hierarchies (Steil, 1997). 
Although  Former  athlete  10  struggled  to  move  up  the 
organizational  hierarchy,  she  succeeded.  She  was  probably  not  able  to 
fully break the glass ceiling, as there were still obstacles for her to remain 
in the position, for example, but she was able to make the glass ceiling 
weaker by taking a management position at a sports complex in Rio de 
Janeiro. According to her, “I was the first woman to manage a very large sports 
complex  in  Rio  de  Janeiro  [...]  It  went  like  this:  I  sat  down  at  a  table;  all  the 
presidents of the federation were men, and  I was the  only woman, right, confronting 
that situation.” 
Consistent with the difficulties encountered by the former athletes 
as a result of gender inequalities, another respondent, Former athlete 9, 
says  that  she  confronted  hardships  (primarily  machismo  and 
discrimination  from  her  father)  to  play  a  sport  that,  at  the  time,  was 
considered  a  men’s  sport,  a  statement  that  supports  issues  addressed 
CAMARGO and KESSLER (2017), who discuss the difficulties faced by 
women athletes in a space—sports—that is considered to be for men.  
[...]  my  father  strongly  discouraged  me  because  for  my 
generation, he said that soccer was for men; so, he didn’t 
like  it  when  I  played  in  the  street  with  the  boys  or  at 
school. [...] My mother was in charge at home, fortunately 
for me; so, my mother said ‘yes,’ and that was what, what I 
pursued. (Former athlete 9) 
Relations  between  women  and  labor,  such  as  those  presented 
above, have been the focus of feminist and gender studies, which point 
to the need to triangulate the intersections— or intersectionalities—that 
characterize those  relationships: social class,  gender, and race. Through 
the dynamics of those intersections, it is possible to seek explanations for