In contemporary Western-European cities, religious diversity and street football are both characteristics of urban life. Based on ten months of ethnographic research amongst young Muslim residents of the Schilderswijk, an urban neighbourhood in the Netherlands, this article discusses how to study religious diversity in relation to girls’ football in urban spaces. It critically discusses how religion in intersectionality scholarship and in feminist scholarship on religion and gender is narrowly conceptualised as a form of racialised oppression or as piousness. I argue that these conceptualisations fail to capture the urban experiences and practices of ‘religious but not so religious’ young residents of the Schilderswijk who play football tog...
Conceptualizing Othering as an intercorporeal encounter in urban space, the paper explores how Other...
With regards to Girlhood Studies and the importance of incorporating intersectionality theory, this ...
Despite the recent wave of scholarship on intersectionality, as well as a surge in feminist scholars...
In contemporary Western-European cities, religious diversity and street football are both characteri...
In the Netherlands, there is an enormous increase in girls’ participation in football, both in offic...
There is a large focus on the dominant discourses that frame Muslim women as "other" in European pub...
Based on original ethnographic research in a multicultural neighbourhood in The Hague, this open acc...
Based on original ethnographic research in a multicultural neighbourhood in The Hague, this open acc...
In the Netherlands, informal youth sports such as community football are mainly seen as a bridge tow...
Contains fulltext : 222422pos.pdf (Author’s version postprint ) (Closed access) ...
This article discusses the role of race as it intersects with religion, gender, and class in Dutch p...
In this piece we document how a football club has proved to be an important mechanism of integratio...
Abstract: Young people in Antwerp are brought up in a superdiverse majority-minority city. While som...
This article explores the phenomenon of practising Muslim women playing Australian Rules football (A...
Religion is a much contested issue in Dutch politics and more specifically in Amsterdam. We investig...
Conceptualizing Othering as an intercorporeal encounter in urban space, the paper explores how Other...
With regards to Girlhood Studies and the importance of incorporating intersectionality theory, this ...
Despite the recent wave of scholarship on intersectionality, as well as a surge in feminist scholars...
In contemporary Western-European cities, religious diversity and street football are both characteri...
In the Netherlands, there is an enormous increase in girls’ participation in football, both in offic...
There is a large focus on the dominant discourses that frame Muslim women as "other" in European pub...
Based on original ethnographic research in a multicultural neighbourhood in The Hague, this open acc...
Based on original ethnographic research in a multicultural neighbourhood in The Hague, this open acc...
In the Netherlands, informal youth sports such as community football are mainly seen as a bridge tow...
Contains fulltext : 222422pos.pdf (Author’s version postprint ) (Closed access) ...
This article discusses the role of race as it intersects with religion, gender, and class in Dutch p...
In this piece we document how a football club has proved to be an important mechanism of integratio...
Abstract: Young people in Antwerp are brought up in a superdiverse majority-minority city. While som...
This article explores the phenomenon of practising Muslim women playing Australian Rules football (A...
Religion is a much contested issue in Dutch politics and more specifically in Amsterdam. We investig...
Conceptualizing Othering as an intercorporeal encounter in urban space, the paper explores how Other...
With regards to Girlhood Studies and the importance of incorporating intersectionality theory, this ...
Despite the recent wave of scholarship on intersectionality, as well as a surge in feminist scholars...