ABSTRACT

Twitter, Facebook, online forums, blogs and websites – scholars are increasingly turning to digital sources to study sport and physical activity. These platforms have generated new digital content ripe for analysis and are making it possible to investigate communities that were previously inaccessible. However, they have also created theoretical, methodological, practical and ethical challenges.

This book critically examines the opportunities open to qualitative researchers working in digital spaces and offers novel insights into how the rise of new technology is helping to shape sport studies. Showcasing original research on emerging themes, trends and issues such as digital sociology, media citizenship, online gaming, Big Data, fitness apps and online fan cultures, this collection leads the way in this fast-developing field of study. It not only considers the possibilities and limitations of using digital tools to conduct qualitative research into sport, but also provides innovative examples of how researchers can adapt successfully to ever-evolving technologies.

Digital Qualitative Research in Sport and Physical Activity is essential reading for all students and scholars interested in the latest digital developments in sport studies and research methods.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Digital qualitative research in sport and physical activity

part I|44 pages

The potential of the Web for sport and physical activity studies: theoretical foundations

chapter 2|15 pages

The datafication of everything

Towards a sociology of sport and Big Data

chapter 3|14 pages

Transformative potential?

Feminist approaches to digital sport media research

part II|50 pages

Going digital: methodological questions and considerations

chapter 4|16 pages

Understanding athletes’ online participation

A ticket to qualitative research on online sports arenas

chapter 5|19 pages

Guarding against quick and easy

Tightening up qualitative sport and social media research

part III|65 pages

Contributions from the field: digital research in practice

chapter 7|17 pages

Mommy blogging

Understanding athlete-mother identities in a running community using discursive psychological analysis

chapter 8|16 pages

Unless you go online you’re on your own

Blogging as a bridge in para-sport

chapter 9|14 pages

Sponsorship goes social

Analyzing Twitter users’ discussion of French Open sponsors

chapter 10|11 pages

Shaky footage from the field

Envisioning a new terrain with film-based inquiry

chapter |6 pages

Afterword

Sport’s digital future: biodigital design, e-sport, mixed reality, fan engagement and gamification