In this article, we explore the efficacy of sport as an instrument for social inclusion through an analysis of the film Bend it Like Beckham. The film argues for the potential of sport to foster a more inclusive society in terms of multiculturalism and gender equity by showing how a hybrid culture can be forged through the microcosm of an English young women's football club, while simultaneously challenging assumptions about traditional masculinities and femininities. Yet, despite appearances, Bend it Like Beckham does little to challenge the structure of English society. Ultimately, the version of multiculturalism offered by the film is one of assimilation to a utopian English norm. This conception appears progressive in its availability t...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Sports Coaching Review...
The aim of the research is to analyze the ways in which the cultural meanings of professional sport ...
The patriarchal hegemony engulfing British football continues to be problematic for girls and women ...
In this article, we explore the efficacy of sport as an instrument for social inclusion through an a...
In this article, we explore the efficacy of sport as an instrument for social inclusion through an a...
In this article, we explore the efficacy of sport as an instrument for social inclusion through an a...
Drawing on debates around lesbian (in)visibility, representability and appropriation in cinema, this...
This Article looks at the coming-of-age stories in two recent films, Bend It Like Beckham and Real W...
In an interview, Chadha, director of Bend It Like Beckham (2002), declares that the reason that she ...
The object of the study is a movie Bend It Like Beckham directed by Gurinder Chadha. The study is to...
This Paper describes a journey in research which crosses both geographical and gender boundaries to ...
This article is concerned with the media image of some of the women associated with professional foo...
This article offers a theoretical exploration of the growing trend in the United Kingdom to utilize ...
Modernization and decline were matters of intense debate and concern in the Britain of the late 1950...
287 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.This project is part manifest...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Sports Coaching Review...
The aim of the research is to analyze the ways in which the cultural meanings of professional sport ...
The patriarchal hegemony engulfing British football continues to be problematic for girls and women ...
In this article, we explore the efficacy of sport as an instrument for social inclusion through an a...
In this article, we explore the efficacy of sport as an instrument for social inclusion through an a...
In this article, we explore the efficacy of sport as an instrument for social inclusion through an a...
Drawing on debates around lesbian (in)visibility, representability and appropriation in cinema, this...
This Article looks at the coming-of-age stories in two recent films, Bend It Like Beckham and Real W...
In an interview, Chadha, director of Bend It Like Beckham (2002), declares that the reason that she ...
The object of the study is a movie Bend It Like Beckham directed by Gurinder Chadha. The study is to...
This Paper describes a journey in research which crosses both geographical and gender boundaries to ...
This article is concerned with the media image of some of the women associated with professional foo...
This article offers a theoretical exploration of the growing trend in the United Kingdom to utilize ...
Modernization and decline were matters of intense debate and concern in the Britain of the late 1950...
287 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.This project is part manifest...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Sports Coaching Review...
The aim of the research is to analyze the ways in which the cultural meanings of professional sport ...
The patriarchal hegemony engulfing British football continues to be problematic for girls and women ...