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Global Intersectionality of Education, Sports, Race, and Gender
ISSN: 2578-7713
This series responds to the interesting dialogue and unique social phenomena in the global context produced by the intersections of race, sport, gender, and culture. Global Intersectionality explores these intersections and expands the literature on how each inform our thinking around certain dominant ideologies. This series examines how sporting practices in the U.S. are becoming the global norm in defining what is sport, thus our understanding of race, gender, and culture. The purpose is to inform sport enthusiasts, college students— undergraduate or graduate— educators, researchers, policy makers, and other stakeholders—who are social justice oriented— about the role sport has in contributing to informing cultural ideology, reproducing and reinforcing race and gender ideologies. It also seeks to foster an understanding of how this social phenomenon, that is often situated as merely entertainment or a recreational activity for leisure, has shifted into a cultural practice that can engender global socio-political relations. The topics will include critical moments in sport, as well as broader social movements in sporting context. In addition, this series will dis- cuss topics ranging from youth to professional sporting experiences with attention given to the socialization and educational processes inherent in these experiences as it relates to race, gender, and culture—one title might explore the global sporting practices of Black women, another book topic will examine the sporting practices and the academic and athletic excellence achieved at Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Or, for example, another topic might be examining the athletic migration patterns of African athletes to Europe and the U.S. The uniqueness of the titles in this series is that they will employ a variety of methodologies, including, but not limited to, qualitative, quantitative, mixed methods methodological approaches, non- empirical and socio-historical approaches that incorporate primary and secondary data sources.
4 publications
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Boundaries, Intersectionality, and Hybridism Applied to Migrant Narratives
©2026 Edited Collection -
Intersectional Futures in Climate Fiction
Undoing the Anthropocene master narrative©2025 Monographs -
The Rationality of the Christian Faith and the Rationality of Science
Understanding Stanley Jaki©2022 Thesis -
Dangers of Narrative and Fictionality
A Rhetorical Approach to Storytelling in Contemporary Western Culture©2024 Edited Collection -
Meaning and functionality of heḇel in Qoheleth
Translation, reception and reconfiguration©2026 Thesis -
Critique of Rationality
©2022 Monographs -
Directionality in English morphological conversion
©2025 Monographs -
Whose Truth? Which Rationality?
John Hick’s Pluralist Strategies for the Management of Conflicting Truth Claims among the World Religions©2008 Thesis -
Internationality in American Fiction
Henry James – William Dean Howells – William Faulkner – Toni Morrison©2005 Conference proceedings -
Affect, Ecofeminism, and Intersectional Struggles in Latin America
A Tribute to Berta Cáceres©2020 Monographs -
Travelling Concepts: New Fictionality Studies
©2020 Edited Collection -
Research and teaching at the intersection
Navigating the territory of grammar and writing in the context of metalinguistic activity©2020 Edited Collection -
Relationality in Education of Morality
©2021 Edited Collection -
The Intersection of Material and Poetic Economy
Gustav Freytag’s "Soll und Haben</I> and Adalbert Stifter’s "Der Nachsommer</I>©2009 Monographs -
Essays on Values and Practical Rationality
Ethical and Aesthetical Dimensions©2017 Edited Collection