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The chapters in the Women's Football in Latin America two volumes
will look at the social and historical means of the embodied
representation of gender differences that has been deeply embedded
in the history of Latin American women and football. The authors
identify and analyse how, in a range of ways, Latin American women
have found in-between spaces, amid severe macho structures, to
establish and play their football. As a result, the book will be of
interest to researchers and students of sport sociology, football
studies, gender studies, comparative sports studies, sports
history, and Latin American sporting culture. The first volume of
this edited collection brings together a variety of high-quality
research investigating women's football in Brazil to an
international, English readership. The complex issues surrounding
women and sport have attracted the attention of Brazilian academics
since the early 1980s, and this book seeks to update that
scholarship to the modern day, with chapters on sports media, 2019
FIFA Women's World Cup, grassroots women's football, women's
football fans. The book also indicates the forthcoming research and
political challenges for gender equity in Brazilian football.
The chapters in the Women's Football in Latin America two volumes
will look at the social and historical means of the embodied
representation of gender differences that has been deeply embedded
in the history of Latin American women and football. The authors
identify and analyse how, in a range of ways, Latin American women
have found in-between spaces, amid severe macho structures, to
establish and play their football. As a result, the book will be of
interest to researchers and students of sport sociology, football
studies, gender studies, comparative sports studies, sports
history, and Latin American sporting culture. The second volume of
this edited collection integrates a range of high-quality studies
on women's football across Latin American countries to a global
readership. From studies with marginalized communities, football
fans but also the media and professional women's footballers, the
chapters show how futbol has been a key part of oppressive gender
structures, and ways that women have fought for gender equity
within this key cultural expression in Latin America. The book also
suggests a fascinating research and activist agenda for women's
football in the continent for the next decades.
Though an integral element of sport sociology, the study of
masculinities in sport has been largely confined to Western sports
such as American football. This book provides a more expanded view,
offering tantalising insights into sport and manliness from
culturally and geographically distinct perspectives. Editors Jorge
Knijnik and Daryl Adair, along with a group of international
researchers, articulate how various types of masculinities can be
played out in different sports by drawing from personal experiences
of athletes, investigating the cultural -- and even global --
impact of male achievements in sport, and comparing men's
experiences in sport with women's. While maintaining the body's
pivotal role in the social construction of gender, Embodied
Masculinities provides the sport sociological literature with an
innovative and truly global perspective on what it means to "be a
man", whether on the field, on the court, or in the saddle.
This volume brings together studies from various disciplines of the
social sciences and humanities ( anthropology, sociology, cultural
studies, history and literary theory) that shed light on the
equestrian world as a historically gendered and highly dynamic
field of contemporary sport and culture. From high level
international dressage and jumping, polo and the turf, to the rodeo
world of the Americas and popular forms of equestrian sport and
culture, we are introduced to a range of issues that are played out
at local and global, national and international levels. Students
and scholars of gender, culture and sport will find much of
interest in this original look at contemporary issues such as
"engendered" (women's and men's) identities/subjectivities as
equestrians, representations of girls, horses and the world of
adventure in juvenile fiction; the current "feminization" of
particular equestrian activities (and where boys and men stand in
relation to this); how broad forms of social inequality and
stratification play themselves out within gendered equestrian
contexts; men and women and their relation to horses within the
framework of current discussions on the relation of animals to
humans (which may include not only love and care, but also
exploitation and violence), among others. Singular contributions
show how equestrian activities contribute to historical and current
constructions of embodied "femininities" and "masculinities",
reflecting a world that has been moving "beyond the binaries" while
continuing to be enmeshed in their persistent and contradictory
legacy.
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