Forword - Michael S Kimmel
Sudying Sport, Men and Masculinities from Feminist Standpoints -
Jim McKay, Michael A Messner and Don Sabo
PART ONE: EVERDAY CONSTRUCTIONS OF HEGEMONIC MASCULINITY
Wrestling with Gender - Cynthia A Hasbrook and Othello Harris
Physicality and Masculinities Among Inner-City First and Second
Graders
Moms, Sisters, and Ladies - Stephan R Walk
Women Student Trainers in Men′s Intercollegiate Sport
The Morality/Masculinity Paradox - Shari Lee Dworkin and Faye Linda
Wachs
Masculinity, Sport, and the Media
Dueling Machos - Alan M Klein
Masculinity and Sport in Mexican Baseball
PART TWO: MEN′S VIOLENCE AND SPORT
`Be a Buddy to your Buddy′ - Laurence De Garis
Male Identity, Aggression and Intimacy in a Boxing Gym
Researching Sports Injury - Kevin Young and Philip White
Reconstructing Dangerous Masculinities
Domestic Violence and Televised Athletic Events - Don Sabo, Philip
M Gray and Linda A Moore
`It′s a Man Thing′
Athletic Affiliation and Violence Against Women - Todd Crosset
Toward a Structural Prevention Project
Booze and Bar Fights - Timothy Jon Curry
A Journey to the Dark Side of College Athletics
After the War? Soccer, Masculinity, and Violence in Northern
Ireland - Alan Bairner
PART THREE: CONTESTING THE GENDER REGIME OF SPORT
Conceptions of Masculinity and Gender Transgressions in Sport Among
Adolescent Boys - Suzanne Laberge and Mathieu Albert
Hegemony, Contestation, and the Social Class Dynamic
Homosexuality and Sport - Brian Pronger
Who′s Winning?
Panic Sport and the Racialized Masculine Body - David Rowe, Jim
McKay, and Toby Miller
Dennis Rodman-Do You Feel Feminine Yet? - Michele D Dunbar
Black Masculinity, Gender Transgression, and Reproductive Rebellion
on MTV
I was hired in 1982 as an assistant professor. I left a joint
appointment between Sociology and African-American Studies to join
the D′Youville faculty. At D′Youville I was provided the
opportunity to teach across disciplines and the freedom to pursue
an aggressive research and writing agenda.
My lifelong intellectual passion has been to understand gender
relations. Sociology is the most comprehensive knowledge framework
to explore the psychological, social, cultural, and sexual
dimensions of gender. I have published extensively on gender
relations in relation to issues, including physical activity and
health, gender equity in athletics, sport and masculinity, and
men′s violence. I have been a leader in the development of social
scientific study of men and masculinities, particularly in the
areas of sport and health.
I′m founder and director of the Center for Research on Physical
Activity, Sport & Health (CRPASH) at D′Youville. The mission of
CRPASH is to design, conduct, and disseminate cutting-edge research
on the links among physical activity, sport and health. We are an
organizational catalyst for interdisciplinary research projects
that foster education, policy development, and public health
initiatives. We specialize in getting knowledge and policy "off the
shelf" and into communities, schools, and the media, where it can
impact people′s lives. CRPASH′s partnerships with national
nonprofits, visionary donors, and corporate sponsors enable us to
maximize the educational impacts of our research.
I am a Professor of Health Policy in D′Youville′s Health Policy &
Health Education Doctoral Program. For students this program is
both an intellectually challenging and supportive environment that
deepens their knowledge, develops their research and managerial
skills, and allows them to pursue a personally and professionally
meaningful scholarly agenda. Our small classes help produce big
results.
I′ve also served as the Research Director for the Women′s Sports
Foundation (WSF). I like to say that I have two bosses who are both
women: Sr. Denise Roche, president of D′Youville College, and
Billie Jean King, founder and Board Chair of the Women′s Sports
Foundation.
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