The experiences of female sports fans have been largely marginalised in academic research to date and little research has examined the formative sporting experiences of female spectators. This article draws on 51 semi-structured interviews with three generations of female fans of one (men's) professional football club (Leicester City), to consider the extent to which sports participation at school and elsewhere influences female football fandom, and also explores the influence of the family in channelling young females into or away from sport. We begin by examining the extent to which women had opportunities to experience football at school and how the type of school they attended affected these opportunities. We consider continuities and d...
The aim of this Research Project was to contribute to the gaps identified in the current literature...
Women’s sport, and perhaps especially women’s football, in England has enjoyed much greater media vi...
Football has long been woven into Britain’s cultural tapestry as a ‘men’s sport’ and women have been...
The experiences of female sports fans have been largely marginalised in academic research to date an...
The experiences of female sports fans have been largely marginalised in academic research to date an...
This thesis is an exploratory study which examines, comparatively, the largely neglected area of fem...
This thesis is an exploratory study which examines, comparatively, the largely neglected area of fem...
Pope and Williams argue that women’s experiences as fans have been largely marginalized in socio-his...
This paper considers the location of women as fans and followers of sport and the consequences of th...
Although many British historians claim that English football in the post-World War II period was sub...
The provision of girls football opportunities within school sport settings has increased in recent y...
There is little, arguably insufficient literature in the mainstream (or 'malestream') domain of spor...
Consistent with FIFA president Sepp Blatter’s proclamation that the future of football is fema...
In the Academy, female fandom is often conceived of in ways which consciously exclude sport, and wom...
The aim of the paper is to understand how young generations consider women playing football since wo...
The aim of this Research Project was to contribute to the gaps identified in the current literature...
Women’s sport, and perhaps especially women’s football, in England has enjoyed much greater media vi...
Football has long been woven into Britain’s cultural tapestry as a ‘men’s sport’ and women have been...
The experiences of female sports fans have been largely marginalised in academic research to date an...
The experiences of female sports fans have been largely marginalised in academic research to date an...
This thesis is an exploratory study which examines, comparatively, the largely neglected area of fem...
This thesis is an exploratory study which examines, comparatively, the largely neglected area of fem...
Pope and Williams argue that women’s experiences as fans have been largely marginalized in socio-his...
This paper considers the location of women as fans and followers of sport and the consequences of th...
Although many British historians claim that English football in the post-World War II period was sub...
The provision of girls football opportunities within school sport settings has increased in recent y...
There is little, arguably insufficient literature in the mainstream (or 'malestream') domain of spor...
Consistent with FIFA president Sepp Blatter’s proclamation that the future of football is fema...
In the Academy, female fandom is often conceived of in ways which consciously exclude sport, and wom...
The aim of the paper is to understand how young generations consider women playing football since wo...
The aim of this Research Project was to contribute to the gaps identified in the current literature...
Women’s sport, and perhaps especially women’s football, in England has enjoyed much greater media vi...
Football has long been woven into Britain’s cultural tapestry as a ‘men’s sport’ and women have been...