The experiences of female sports fans have largely been neglected in academic research to date with socio-historical accounts focusing almost exclusively on male fans. Through an excavation of the sporting histories of female football fans this article aims to make one contribution towards changing this. Drawing on Glaser and Strauss’s ‘grounded theory’ approach, 21 semi-structured interviews were conducted with female football fans in England, aged between 50 and 80 years old. My findings begin by examining female fans’ memories of the 1958 Munich air disaster. I move on to examine female experiences and interpretations of the 1966 World Cup finals, before finally discussing the rise of football players in England as sexualised national ce...
The global soccer market has seen a growth in the professionalization of women’s teams and as a resu...
This study explores the gendered narratives constructed in the coverage of the 2016 UEFA European Ch...
This thesis is an exploratory study which examines, comparatively, the largely neglected area of fem...
The experiences of female sports fans have been largely marginalised in academic research to date an...
This article offers an original contribution as the first to focus empirically on men football fans’...
Women’s sport, and perhaps especially women’s football, in England has enjoyed much greater media vi...
The professionalization, commercialization, and mediatization of women’s football have opened new op...
This article draws on the responses of 2,347 football fans (male = 83.4%; female = 16.6%) collected ...
Academic research has typically focused upon the importance of sports fandom for men, and there is a...
There is little, arguably insufficient literature in the mainstream (or 'malestream') domain of spor...
This article examines English print media coverage of the England national women’s football (soccer)...
The past decade has witnessed a growing focus on the study of women sports fans within the social sc...
In 2015, the England Women’s national football team finished third at the Women’s World Cup in Canad...
There is little, arguably insufficient literature in the mainstream (or 'malestream') domain of spor...
This article presents the responses of 1,432 male association football fans, collected via an online...
The global soccer market has seen a growth in the professionalization of women’s teams and as a resu...
This study explores the gendered narratives constructed in the coverage of the 2016 UEFA European Ch...
This thesis is an exploratory study which examines, comparatively, the largely neglected area of fem...
The experiences of female sports fans have been largely marginalised in academic research to date an...
This article offers an original contribution as the first to focus empirically on men football fans’...
Women’s sport, and perhaps especially women’s football, in England has enjoyed much greater media vi...
The professionalization, commercialization, and mediatization of women’s football have opened new op...
This article draws on the responses of 2,347 football fans (male = 83.4%; female = 16.6%) collected ...
Academic research has typically focused upon the importance of sports fandom for men, and there is a...
There is little, arguably insufficient literature in the mainstream (or 'malestream') domain of spor...
This article examines English print media coverage of the England national women’s football (soccer)...
The past decade has witnessed a growing focus on the study of women sports fans within the social sc...
In 2015, the England Women’s national football team finished third at the Women’s World Cup in Canad...
There is little, arguably insufficient literature in the mainstream (or 'malestream') domain of spor...
This article presents the responses of 1,432 male association football fans, collected via an online...
The global soccer market has seen a growth in the professionalization of women’s teams and as a resu...
This study explores the gendered narratives constructed in the coverage of the 2016 UEFA European Ch...
This thesis is an exploratory study which examines, comparatively, the largely neglected area of fem...