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2018 NASSS Annual Conference
Sport Soundtrack: Sport, Music, & Culture
Georgia B [clear filter]
Thursday, November 1
 

8:00am PDT

Student Poster Session
This session(s) will be open to undergraduate students and graduate (e.g., masters, doctoral) student submissions of works-in-progress and well-developed research presented in poster format. Similar to the Call for Sessions, this session seeks research that “promote, stimulate, and encourage the sociological study of play, games, sport and contemporary physical culture”. Supporting the NASSS mission, research posters may also reveal how sport and music challenge the social, economic, and political landscape that often illuminate inequities of race, gender, class, sexual orientation, ability, age, and religious ideologies. Research poster submissions may also demonstrate how the relationship between sport and music (i.e. Alternative, Blues, Chant (Rhythmic Expression), Classical, Country, Dance, Disco, Fitness & Workout, Folk, Funk, Gospel, Heavy Metal, Hip Hop/Rap, Instrumental (Marching Bands/Pep Bands), Jazz, Latin, Movie scores, Opera, Orchestra, Popular, Punk, Reggae, Religious, R & B/Soul, Rock, Techno, Tex-Mex/Tejano, World & etc.) have influenced career industries such as medicine, psychology and counseling, media and film, event management, marketing & public relations, journalism, engineering and technology, fashion, and beyond. We encourage creativity and innovation in the development of topics. We also encourage research that challenge dominant ideologies and hegemonic structures.

Speakers
JA

Jamie Ali

Western Illinois University
Poster PresentationMarketing to Season and Non-Season Ticket Holders in SportThe purpose of this research study is to gain insight on the marketing that goes into professional/collegiate sports. Organizations across the US are generating more revenue annually through ticket sales... Read More →
IA

Ivy Ashe

University of Texas at Austin
Out at the Olympics: The Instagram Identities of Adam Rippon and Gus KenworthyThis study examines the construction of identity and self-identity via social media, using Instagram coverage of Olympic athletes Adam Rippon and Gus Kenworthy as its foundation. At the time of the 2018... Read More →
CB

Celina Banks

Prairie View A&M University
PosterBlack female college athletes and culturally relevant approaches of well-beingThe purpose of this poster presentation is to illuminate how culture affects Black female college athletes’ (BFCA) experiences of well-being. In 2014, the National Collegiate Athletic Association... Read More →
ZB

Zachary Beldon

University of North Texas
Social Inclusion of Refugees in Youth SportsSports is often viewed as a “universal language,” in that it is participated in similarly across the world (Annan, 2004).  Sports can also be a vehicle for  individuals to gain a sense of belonging (Kelley, 2011).  For refugees, this... Read More →
AB

Angela Branch-Vital

Department Head, Prairie View A&M University
The Importance of Culture: Understanding Black Female College Athletes’ Health and Well-BeingThe purpose of this conceptual paper is to illuminate how culture affects Black female college athletes’ (BFCA) experiences of well-being. In 2014, the National Collegiate Athletic Association... Read More →
avatar for Akilah Carter-Francique

Akilah Carter-Francique

President Elect, Prairie View A&M University
The Importance of Culture: Understanding Black Female College Athletes’ Health and Well-BeingThe purpose of this conceptual paper is to illuminate how culture affects Black female college athletes’ (BFCA) experiences of well-being. In 2014, the National Collegiate Athletic Association... Read More →
ES

Erick Samuel Casteneda Enriquez

Wingate University
Racial Minorities Challenge Hegemonic Structures in NASCAR with Their DiversityHistorically, NASCAR Nation has been identified as a culture that emboldens hegemonic structures to govern, configurations such as a resistance to the inclusion of diversity; demonstrated recently in the... Read More →
JH

Jasmine Hamilton

Assistant Professor, Prairie View A&M University
From the theoretical framework of social identity, this study seeks to examine the influence of academic success, athletic performance, and social interactions upon student-athletes attending HBCUs.
TH

Tiffany Higham

"Identify Yourself So We Look Good": Trans Athlete Promotion, University of Lethbridge
The “Identify Series” was created by the Olympic Channel after the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) 2015 change in policy for transgender (trans) athlete participation in the Olympic Games. The series showcases a number of trans athletes and their achievements within... Read More →
GH

Gavin Huse

Trinity University
Scouting Racism: The Permeation of Racial Stereotypes in the NFLThe National Football League (NFL) annually drafts the best collegiate athletes from across the United States in what many in the U.S. consider the biggest non-sporting sporting event. Framed through Critical Race Theory... Read More →
TK

Thomas Kane

Independent Scholar
Gender in wrestling: How the World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) uses women to make a profitThe professional wrestling company World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) has always commodified and sold women. But, the way it sells women has changed over time. Most academic literature on... Read More →
HL

Hongxin Li

Women’s Ice Hockey in China: Political Economy and Gender Equality, University of North Texas
In recent years, women’s ice hockey has undergone tremendous growth worldwide. After winning the bid to host the 2022 Winter Olympics, ice hockey in China started to develop rapidly under the government’s support (Li & Nauright, 2018). Political economy in sports examines the... Read More →
avatar for Charles D.T. Macaulay

Charles D.T. Macaulay

Graduate Assistant, University of Connecticut
There has been a great deal of academic research and journalistic attention paid to the experience of college athletics. However, much of this work has focused on the experience of student-athletes participating in the profit-generating sports, men’s football and men’s basketball... Read More →
KM

Kellae Marshall

Prairie View A&M University
Promotion Opioid usage in Hip-Hop lyrics and SportsThe opiates issues have become a public crisis with a distractive consequences. According to the National Institution on Drug Abuse (NIDA, 2017) 115 people in the United States died after overdosing on opioid.Usage in hip-hop music... Read More →
DM

Dominic Morais

More than Metal: More than metal: A qualitative examination of Division III student-athlete identity after the introduction of a formal strength and conditioning program, Trinity University
Big-time collegiate athletic programs in the U.S. consider "the grind” in the weight room an essential part of the varsity athlete’s career (Shurley & Todd, 2012). Few studies, however, directly address the impact of strength and conditioning programs on the student-athlete experience... Read More →
JN

John Nauright

University of North Texas
The Construction of a New Labor-Capital Relation: Professional Rugby in the United StatesProfessional Rugby Organization (PRO) and Major League Rugby (MLR), the first professional rugby leagues in the United States, were established in 2016 and 2018 respectively. PRO and MLR signal... Read More →
KW

Karen Weiller

University of North Texas
Social Inclusion of Refugees in Youth SportsSports is often viewed as a “universal language,” in that it is participated in similarly across the world (Annan, 2004).  Sports can also be a vehicle for  individuals to gain a sense of belonging (Kelley, 2011).  For refugees, this... Read More →


Thursday November 1, 2018 8:00am - 9:15am PDT
Georgia B

11:00am PDT

Student Poster Session
This session(s) will be open to undergraduate students and graduate (e.g., masters, doctoral) student submissions of works-in-progress and well-developed research presented in poster format. Similar to the Call for Sessions, this session seeks research that “promote, stimulate, and encourage the sociological study of play, games, sport and contemporary physical culture”. Supporting the NASSS mission, research posters may also reveal how sport and music challenge the social, economic, and political landscape that often illuminate inequities of race, gender, class, sexual orientation, ability, age, and religious ideologies. Research poster submissions may also demonstrate how the relationship between sport and music (i.e. Alternative, Blues, Chant (Rhythmic Expression), Classical, Country, Dance, Disco, Fitness & Workout, Folk, Funk, Gospel, Heavy Metal, Hip Hop/Rap, Instrumental (Marching Bands/Pep Bands), Jazz, Latin, Movie scores, Opera, Orchestra, Popular, Punk, Reggae, Religious, R & B/Soul, Rock, Techno, Tex-Mex/Tejano, World & etc.) have influenced career industries such as medicine, psychology and counseling, media and film, event management, marketing & public relations, journalism, engineering and technology, fashion, and beyond. We encourage creativity and innovation in the development of topics. We also encourage research that challenge dominant ideologies and hegemonic structures.

Speakers
JA

Jamie Ali

Western Illinois University
Poster PresentationMarketing to Season and Non-Season Ticket Holders in SportThe purpose of this research study is to gain insight on the marketing that goes into professional/collegiate sports. Organizations across the US are generating more revenue annually through ticket sales... Read More →
MA

Madison Ardizzi

University of British Columbia
AB

Andrea Bundon

The University of British Columbia
Disability in the gym: Perceptions and understandings of individuals with disabilitiesThe study examines the attitudes, perceptions, and understandings of personal trainers and instructors in regards to disability and people with disabilities. The analysis mainly focuses on discovering... Read More →
EC

Elizabeth Coats

Olivet College
CC

Charles Crowley

Transition 101: Creating a pathway of Black student excellence in sport education, Olivet College
The purpose of this paper is to discuss the transition and acclimation of undergraduate students of color that attend Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) to graduate school in the field of sport. More specifically we will discuss the pedagogical efforts to prepare... Read More →
ID

Isaiah Duncan

Western Illinois University
KG

Kevin Gbadebo

Western Illinois University
The Influence of Shoe Companies in AAU BasketballThe Amateur Athletic Union is one of the largest non-profit and multi-sport event organizations for amateurs, founded in 1888. AAU boy’s basketball can be viewed as an outlet, providing opportunities for middle school through high... Read More →
NV

Nancy Van Hoozier

Olivet College
MH

Michael Hutchinson

Western Illinois University
HA

Hailey A. Jungel

Olivet University
CM

Connor MacDonald MacDonald

Sport in the Lives of LGBTQ Calgarians, University of Calgary
The goal of this honours thesis research was to investigate the role that sport played in the lives of LGBTQ Calgarians (Calgary, Alberta, Canada) in the latter decades of the 20th century. Three gay men who resided in Calgary in the 1980s and 90s participated in oral history semi-structured... Read More →
BT

Brent Turner

Western Illinois University
LZ

Ljudmila Zaleteli

The University of British Columbia

Moderators
MK

Michaela Kaliniak

Olivet College


Thursday November 1, 2018 11:00am - 12:15pm PDT
Georgia B

1:30pm PDT

Sport, Society, & Technology #1
This session invites papers that are broadly concerned with issues related to the cultural and sociological study of science, technology, and sport.  Potential topics include, but are not limited to: sport technologies and technologies of the active body; issues related to medicine, risk, and sport; doping, drugs, bioethics, and the active body; (dis)ability, gender, race, class, and sexuality, technology and sport; sporting labs and scientific practices; representations of science and sport; sport 2.0 (e.g. digital interactions); and, sustainability and sport. While open to a range of perspectives, we are especially interested in papers that explore science, technology, and sport intersections through science and technology studies or digital humanities approaches. Finally, in-line with the conference’s focus on creativity and science and technology studies’ and the digital humanities’ support of ‘making and doing’, submissions highlighting innovative practices for producing and expressing research are especially welcome.

Speakers
SB

Sarah Barnes

Georgia Institute of Technology
Sleep performance is the new performance:  Sleep positivity in sportThis paper investigates the growth of a promotional sleep culture within high performance sport. Discussions about sleep in sport are not new. However, what is novel is the presence of biomedical discourses, sleep... Read More →
CC

Caitlin Clarke

University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign
Session: Sport, Society, and TechnologyExercise Science Depression Studies: An Alternative FrameworkThis paper is an excerpt from my dissertation, which takes an interdisciplinary approach to exercise science research on depression. I analyzed 13 meta-analyses and systematic reviews... Read More →
BG

Brian Gearity

University of Denver
Science’s Rockstars and Dominant Discourses of Athletic Performance: How Sociology Can Help Us Think and Practice DifferentlyMerton (1968) coined the term Matthew Effect to show how a small group of scientists and their work reaped great rewards and captured our collective social... Read More →
AP

Anna Posbergh

Nike-Fueled Feminism: Universalizing Women’s Empowerment, University of Maryland - College Park
Nike, a company lauded for its empowering women-centered advertisements, frequently releases global advertisements depicting women overcoming gendered structural barriers and stigma as they determinedly engage in physical activity. The globalized image of the empowered (Nike-clad... Read More →

Moderators
JS

Jen Sterling

University of Iowa
From Xs and Os to 0s and 1s: Tracing data’s visualization in sportInteractive charts, static graphs, and moving dots are just a few of the countless ways data is visually presented for consumption by players, fans, coaches, and management (among others). The creation of this visual... Read More →


Thursday November 1, 2018 1:30pm - 2:45pm PDT
Georgia B

4:30pm PDT

Sport and Youth Development
This Open Session will examine the experiences and state of youth in sport and society.

Speakers
RE

Robert Engvall

Roger Williams University
What's a Parent to Do? The Contradictions Among the "Arms Race" of Youth SportsHow do parents cope with the “arms race in youth sports” in which conflicting and contradictory messages are sent that make it almost impossible to feel good about decisions made. “Kids should play... Read More →
JL

Jenna Lindberg

Dance That Moves: Using student choreography as a vehicle for student expression and identity formationWith the emphasis on sports and athletics in a majority of high schools, dance teams and clubs are often overlooked as a valuable space to cultivate student voice, expression, and... Read More →
AM

Alex Manning

University of Minnesota
Interrelated Spaces of Youth Soccer in the United States: Group Identity, Sporting Development, Competition, and CommunityYouth Soccer in the United States is a social formation and an intersectional contested field of social reproduction with implications beyond the soccer field... Read More →
WM

William Massey

Oregon State University
Systems influences on sport disengagement and disenchantment for traumatized and disadvantaged youthThe dominant sport for good rhetoric has biased theory, research, and praxis in sport for development and peace (SDP; Coalter, 2015). Notably, narratives which may question, disrupt... Read More →
avatar for Marc Pacampara

Marc Pacampara

Program Strategy & Research, foundry10
Marc studied Sociology at Highline College. He developed a love for music and dance which he has pursued rigorously since. Over the years of performing he’s developed a love for developing choreography and teaching. Marc has a strong passion for the arts and continues to help the... Read More →
JS

Jessica Skolnikoff

Roger Williams University
What's a Parent to Do? The Contradictions Among the "Arms Race" of Youth SportsHow do parents cope with the “arms race in youth sports” in which conflicting and contradictory messages are sent that make it almost impossible to feel good about decisions made. “Kids should play... Read More →
MW

Meredith Whitley

Advancing Social Justice through Place-Based Sport for Development Accelerators, Adelphi University
Within the last decade, Sport for Development (SfD) scholars have deconstructed the interplay between development discourse, policy, funding, practice, and local agency, with a particular focus on how global and transnational practices shape Global North-South relations (e.g., Darnell... Read More →

Moderators
JS

Jessica Skolnikoff

Roger Williams University
What's a Parent to Do? The Contradictions Among the "Arms Race" of Youth SportsHow do parents cope with the “arms race in youth sports” in which conflicting and contradictory messages are sent that make it almost impossible to feel good about decisions made. “Kids should play... Read More →
RE

Robert Engvall

Roger Williams University
What's a Parent to Do? The Contradictions Among the "Arms Race" of Youth SportsHow do parents cope with the “arms race in youth sports” in which conflicting and contradictory messages are sent that make it almost impossible to feel good about decisions made. “Kids should play... Read More →


Thursday November 1, 2018 4:30pm - 5:30pm PDT
Georgia B
 
Friday, November 2
 

11:00am PDT

Women, Sports Media, & Film
This Open Session will explore the experiences, value, and relationship between women, sports media, and films and film making.

Speakers
DA

Dunja Antunovic

Assistant Professor, Bradley University
Feminist theory, sports mediaSport films have played a central role in the commemoration of historical events and construction of the past for popular consumption. Except for a few notable examples (e.g., Bend it Like Beckham, Giardina, 2003; ESPN’s Nine for IX series, Heinecken... Read More →
avatar for Cheryl Cooky

Cheryl Cooky

Professor, Purdue University
Editor, Sociology of Sport Journal. Past -President of NASSS (2015-2017). Research interests: the intersections of gender, sport, media, and American culture. Latest book: Serving Equality: Feminism, Media, and Women’s Sport (2022, co-author Dunja Antunovic).
JM

Jennifer McClearen

University of Texas at Austin
The Time for Invigorated Feminist Sports Media Scholarship is NowFeminist scholarship on sports media has long examined how women negotiate femininity and athleticism, how they contend with sexism, and how sports media trivializes, objectifies, and underrepresents women athletes... Read More →
KP

Kate Petty

Durham University
A New Age for Media Coverage of Women’s Sport? An Analysis of English Media Coverage of the 2015 FIFA Women’s World CupThis paper examines English print media coverage of the England national women’s soccer (football) team during the 2015 FIFA Women’s World Cup. It draws theoretically... Read More →
SP

Stacey Pope

Male Fans’ Responses to a New Age of Women’s Soccer, Durham University
Numerous studies since the 1980s demonstrate that women’s sport has been marginalized in the media, serving to reinforce notions of sport as a male domain. However, as a result of a number of interconnected developments in women’s sport over the past decade, there has arguably... Read More →

Moderators
SP

Stacey Pope

Male Fans’ Responses to a New Age of Women’s Soccer, Durham University
Numerous studies since the 1980s demonstrate that women’s sport has been marginalized in the media, serving to reinforce notions of sport as a male domain. However, as a result of a number of interconnected developments in women’s sport over the past decade, there has arguably... Read More →


Friday November 2, 2018 11:00am - 12:15pm PDT
Georgia B

1:30pm PDT

Sport, Society, & Technology #2
Speakers
ML

Mary Louise Adams

Sport facilities vs the environment: Struggles over greenspace in a small city, Queen's University
This paper analyses a conflict between sport facilities and the environment in the planning process for a large piece of ‘natural’ waterfront land in a working-class neighbourhood in a small Canadian city. Debates over the development of the site as parkland bring to light the... Read More →
avatar for Jesse Couture

Jesse Couture

Reflections from the ‘Strava’sphere: Preliminary findings from an ethnographic study of a social network for athletes, University of British Columbia
In recent years, the practice of digital self-tracking has been the focus of much scholarly attention both within and outside of sporting contexts, and critical scholars have begun to take seriously the ways that individuals interact with, and are acted upon by, wearable self-tracking... Read More →
SK

Samantha King

Professor, Queen’s University
In the past two decades, a cultural obsession with dietary protein has emerged against a backdrop of escalating concern about links between meat eating and climate change. The multibillion-dollar industry that drives the protein boom has been built upon the nutrient’s reputation... Read More →
JS

Jen Sterling

University of Iowa
From Xs and Os to 0s and 1s: Tracing data’s visualization in sportInteractive charts, static graphs, and moving dots are just a few of the countless ways data is visually presented for consumption by players, fans, coaches, and management (among others). The creation of this visual... Read More →
GW

Gavin Weedon

Nottingham Trent University
The Nature of the Body in Sport and Physical Culture:  From “Sport and the Environment” to “Ecological Embodiment”Athletic bodies are multispecies, ecological, and entangled in capital accumulation, health projects, and environmental crises. This version of corporeality... Read More →

Moderators
MG

Mary G. McDonald

Reading Susan Birrell Critically: Tales of Her Impact on the Field, Georgia Institute of Technology
Susan Birrell will retire in December 2019 after 40 years at the University of Iowa. Professor Birrell’s groundbreaking scholarship has both contributed to and expanded the boundaries of the Sociology of Sport. Importantly, she was among the first scholars in North America to apply... Read More →


Friday November 2, 2018 1:30pm - 2:45pm PDT
Georgia B

4:30pm PDT

(Re)Building Community through Sport
This Open Session explores building and rebuilding community through sporting events, initiatives, and organizations.

Speakers
DA

David Andrews

University of Maryland
At Play in the Laboratory: Neoliberal Zeal and the Remaking of New Zealand Sport‘Neoliberalism’ is frequently portrayed as a monolithic project emanating from the ‘ideological heartlands’ of the United States and the United Kingdom. However, while Thatcher, Reagan and their... Read More →
LD

Liz Delia

Associate Professor, University of Massachusetts Amherst
MG

Michael Giardina

Florida State University
"We are the warriors who built this town": #VegasStrong, Sport, and the Cultural Politics of Civic IdentityOn October 10, 2017, the expansion Las Vegas Golden Knights raised the curtain on their inaugural home opener in the National Hockey League with a 5-2 victory over the Arizona... Read More →
AG

Andrew Grainger

Massey University
At Play in the Laboratory: Neoliberal Zeal and the Remaking of New Zealand Sport‘Neoliberalism’ is frequently portrayed as a monolithic project emanating from the ‘ideological heartlands’ of the United States and the United Kingdom. However, while Thatcher, Reagan and their... Read More →
BP

Benjamin Pereira

Florida State University
"We are the warriors who built this town": #VegasStrong, Sport, and the Cultural Politics of Civic IdentityOn October 10, 2017, the expansion Las Vegas Golden Knights raised the curtain on their inaugural home opener in the National Hockey League with a 5-2 victory over the Arizona... Read More →

Moderators
MG

Michael Giardina

Florida State University
"We are the warriors who built this town": #VegasStrong, Sport, and the Cultural Politics of Civic IdentityOn October 10, 2017, the expansion Las Vegas Golden Knights raised the curtain on their inaugural home opener in the National Hockey League with a 5-2 victory over the Arizona... Read More →


Friday November 2, 2018 4:30pm - 5:30pm PDT
Georgia B
 
Saturday, November 3
 

11:00am PDT

Songs of Liberation: Methods of Resistance in Sporting Spaces #2
In 2018, we find ourselves in the midst of what Harry Edwards (2017) referred to as the fourth wave of athlete activism. This era has moved athletes, activists, and scholars to pursue and express creative methods of resistance to oppressive structures in and through sporting spaces (i.e., academia and industry). Springing from the soundtrack of resistance, liberation sociology seeks to “…not just research the social world but assist in changing it” (Feagin, Vera, & Ducey, 2015, p. 1). Therefore, this session will highlight contemporary innovations in resistance methods both in and beyond the academic study of sport. In doing so, we welcome presentations that creatively make use of epistemological and methodological tools (e.g., poetry, song, dance, storytelling, film, photovoice, etc.) to “sing” these songs of liberation. Revolutions necessitate art (Matsuda, 2017) and we seek to facilitate a space of dialogue and action to reverberate these emancipatory melodies in sporting spaces.

Speakers
AD

Alexander Deeb

University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Colin Kaepernick and the Politics of Taking a KneeOn August 26, 2016, former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick remained seated on the team bench during the national anthem of a preseason NFL game. With his protest, Kaepernick ignited a series of reactions that ranged... Read More →
avatar for Jeff Graham

Jeff Graham

Assistant Professor, University of Tennessee - Knoxville
Research examining work and family consistently indicates that work-family conflict results in negative outcomes for individuals, families, and the organizations they work for (Byron, 2005). Research also indicates that support from the workplace can mitigate the frequency and strength... Read More →
SU

Sang Uk Joo

Messiah College
Asian American Jazz behind the Barbed WireAsian American jazz musicians involved in the Asian American movement began to weld their musical activities to the struggle for Asian American empowerment and identity during the late 1970s and early 1980s (Fellezs, 2007). Sansei (third-generation... Read More →
MA

Mi Ae Lee

Farmingdale State College
Asian American Jazz behind the Barbed WireAsian American jazz musicians involved in the Asian American movement began to weld their musical activities to the struggle for Asian American empowerment and identity during the late 1970s and early 1980s (Fellezs, 2007). Sansei (third-generation... Read More →
KO

Kristi Oshiro

Beyond the Black-White Binary: Illuminating the Voices of Female Student-Athletes of Color, Texas A&M University
Racism and sexism has and continues to permeate college sport. Reflecting the dominant white male culture, scholarship in sporting spaces has generally failed to capture the lived experiences of “women and people of color, and most specifically ignores women who are people of color... Read More →
JN

John N. Singer

Texas A&M University
Session: Songs of Liberation: Methods of Resistance in Sporting Spaces #1Last Chance U: Exploring College Football Experiences and Media Narratives through Video ElicitationIn 2016 Netflix released an original documentary series, Last Chance U, focused on the East Mississippi State... Read More →
AJ

Anthony J. Weems

Texas A&M University
Session: Songs of liberation: Methods of resistance in sporting spaces #2Sport Management: Courage to Grow Through Songs of LiberationIn an article entitled “Sport without management” in the Journal of Sport Management, Newman (2014) problematized how the field of sport management... Read More →

Moderators
AJ

Anthony J. Weems

Texas A&M University
Session: Songs of liberation: Methods of resistance in sporting spaces #2Sport Management: Courage to Grow Through Songs of LiberationIn an article entitled “Sport without management” in the Journal of Sport Management, Newman (2014) problematized how the field of sport management... Read More →
JN

John N. Singer

Texas A&M University
Session: Songs of Liberation: Methods of Resistance in Sporting Spaces #1Last Chance U: Exploring College Football Experiences and Media Narratives through Video ElicitationIn 2016 Netflix released an original documentary series, Last Chance U, focused on the East Mississippi State... Read More →
KF

Kristi F. Oshiro

Texas A&M University


Saturday November 3, 2018 11:00am - 12:15pm PDT
Georgia B

1:30pm PDT

Sport, Society, & Technology #3
This session invites papers that are broadly concerned with issues related to the cultural and sociological study of science, technology, and sport.  Potential topics include, but are not limited to: sport technologies and technologies of the active body; issues related to medicine, risk, and sport; doping, drugs, bioethics, and the active body; (dis)ability, gender, race, class, and sexuality, technology and sport; sporting labs and scientific practices; representations of science and sport; sport 2.0 (e.g. digital interactions); and, sustainability and sport. While open to a range of perspectives, we are especially interested in papers that explore science, technology, and sport intersections through science and technology studies or digital humanities approaches. Finally, in-line with the conference’s focus on creativity and science and technology studies’ and the digital humanities’ support of ‘making and doing’, submissions highlighting innovative practices for producing and expressing research are especially welcome.

Speakers
SB

Sean Brayton

University of Lethbridge
Concussion, Brain Donations and a Political Economy of the Athlete’s CorpseSince 2008, the Concussion Legacy Foundation has secured nearly 1,500 pledges from former athletes and military veterans to become brain donors. While such pledges are increasingly reported as both “honorable... Read More →
AC

Alex Channon

Medical care as self-defence: Mixed martial arts, sports medics and the politics of injury, University of Brighton
Mixed martial arts (MMA) occupies a uniquely precarious position in the field of contemporary performance sport. Featuring the striking of downed opponents, a relatively high frequency of blood-letting, and a promotional culture which creates and amplifies narratives of hostility... Read More →
MH

Michelle Helstein

University of Lethbridge
KH

Kathryn Henne

University of Waterloo/Australian National University
A criminal mind or a damaged brain? The multiplicities of Aaron Hernandez and CTEThis analysis considers how articulations of tacit and expert knowledge play out in relation to the high-profile case of Aaron Hernandez, a former NFL player who committed suicide while serving a life... Read More →
avatar for Mathew Hillier

Mathew Hillier

e-Assessment Academic, Macquarie University
Challenges and Opportunities for Assessment in XR - Panel member for Workshop Special Session.Presentation introduction:IV. TRANSFORMING ASSESSMENTThe presentation will outline an Australian perspective on the obstacles and progress made in the use of XR for student assessment.The... Read More →
JC

John C. Hyden

Campbell Clinic & University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center
Concuss(us): On Knowing the Athletic Brain, DamagedSport-based traumatic brain injuries have in recent years become increasingly exigent in public health and medical science discourses. Numerous scholars and public commentators have suggested that the violence endogenous to many popular... Read More →
CR

Christopher R. Matthews

Nottingham Trent University
‘We don’t want to stop you fighting...’: Interactional strategies in combat sports medical workThis paper draws on observation and interview data from an empirical study of doctors, nurses, paramedics, EMTs and other staff who offer medical services at combat sports events in... Read More →
avatar for Joshua Newman

Joshua Newman

Professor, Florida State University
Session: Digital Audio, Sound, and Physical Culture Research PracticeNarratives, Meaning-making, and Community Identity in E-sportsSport sociologists have long studied the extent to and ways in which identities in traditional sport settings are constructed through the media in a global(izing... Read More →
MV

Matt Ventresca

Georgia Institute of Technology
A criminal mind or a damaged brain? The multiplicities of Aaron Hernandez and CTEThis analysis considers how articulations of tacit and expert knowledge play out in relation to the high-profile case of Aaron Hernandez, a former NFL player who committed suicide while serving a life... Read More →

Moderators
JS

Jen Sterling

University of Iowa
From Xs and Os to 0s and 1s: Tracing data’s visualization in sportInteractive charts, static graphs, and moving dots are just a few of the countless ways data is visually presented for consumption by players, fans, coaches, and management (among others). The creation of this visual... Read More →


Saturday November 3, 2018 1:30pm - 2:45pm PDT
Georgia B
 
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