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Researching Disability Sport: Theory, Method, Practice [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Solent University, Southampton, UK), Edited by (Canterbury Christ Church University, UK), Edited by (Western University, Canada)
Marking a new direction for disability sport scholarship, this book explores cutting-edge issues and engages creatively with contemporary approaches to research in this important emerging discipline.

Featuring contributions from leading and up-and-coming scholars around the world, the books wide-ranging chapters offer novel perspectives on the relationship between theory, method, and empiricism in disability sport research and highlight how researchers can be both innovative and informed when entering the field. It also explores methodological considerations when conducting disability sport research, including social, cultural, and political reflections of the research process from disabled and non-disabled academics. This much-needed resource supports disability sport scholars in developing a conceptual grounding in the subject and establishes a space for intersectional accounts of sport and physical activity which challenge homogenous understandings of disability.

This book is essential reading for any student or researcher working in disability sport, adapted physical activity, or adapted physical education, and a valuable reference for anybody with an interest in the sociology of sport, disability studies, cultural studies, the body, or research methodology.
List of Contributors
vii
Acknowledgements x
1 Researching Disability Sport: An Introduction
1(10)
Ben Powis
James Brighton
R. David Howe
PART I Foundations for Disability Sport Scholarship
11(72)
2 Theorising Disability Sport
13(28)
James Brighton
P. David Howe
Ben Powis
3 Cultural Politics, Disability Sport and Physical Activity Research
41(14)
P. David Howe
4 What Are We Doing Here? Confessional Tales of Non-Disabled Researchers in Disability Sport
55(15)
Jess Macbeth
Ben Powis
5 Barriers to Disability Sport Research and the Global South: A Personal View
70(13)
Leslie Swartz
PART II Disability, Sport and Intersectionality
83(58)
6 Disabled Female Sporting Bodies: Reflections on (In)Visibility of disAbility in Sport
85(15)
Karen P. Depauw
7 Playing, Passing, and Pageantry: A Collaborative Autoethnography on Sport, Disability, Sexuality, and Belonging
100(14)
Stephanie Wheeler
Danielle Peers
8 Race, Disability and Sport: The Experience of Black Deaf Individuals
114(12)
Thomas Irish
Katrina Mcdonald
Francesca Cavallerio
9 Disability and Ageing: Dads, Sons, Sport and Impairment
126(15)
James Brighton
PART III From Theory to Practice: Contemporary Issues in Disability Sport
141(61)
10 Seeing without Sight: The Athlete/Guide Partnership in Disability Sport
143(14)
Andrea Bundon
Staci Mannella
11 Confronting Ableism from within: Reflections on Anti-Ableism Research in Disability Sport
157(14)
Carla Filomena Silva
12 Exercise, Rehabilitation and Posthuman Disability Studies: Four Responses
171(14)
Javier Monforte
Barbara E. Gibson
Brett Smith
Dan Goodley
13 Para-Sport Activism in South Korea
185(13)
Inhyang Choi
Damian Haslett
Brett Smith
14 Conclusion: The Future of Disability Sport Research
198(4)
P. David Howe
Ben Powis
James Brighton
Index 202
Ben Powis is a Course Leader in the Faculty of Sport, Health and Social Sciences at Solent University, UK. His current research interests lie in the sociology of disability sport, the embodied experiences of visually impaired people in sport and physical activity, and investigating the significance of sensuous sporting experiences.

James Brighton is a Senior Lecturer in the Sociology of Sport and Exercise at Canterbury Christ Church University, UK. His theoretical and empirical research interests lie in disability studies, the sociology of the body and the social and cultural analyses of sport and fitness. Methodologically, he is interested in interpretive forms of qualitative inquiry including ethnography, life history, and narrative analyses.

P. David Howe is a social anthropologist and holds the Dr. Frank J. Hayden Endowed Chair in Sport and Social Impact in the School of Kinesiology at Western University, Canada. His ethnographic research focuses on unpacking the embodied sociocultural milieu surrounding inclusive physical activity and disability sport. He is also editor of the Routledge book series Disability, Sport and Physical Activity Cultures.