ABSTRACT

This book examines the experiences of amateur players in women’s football, challenging conventional discourses that centre male, masculine, and heterosexual identities and offering a new narrative that re-positions women’s voices.

Based on original empirical research, including extended interviews with female players, the book outlines current debates in women’s football around gender, identity, and intersectionality. It explores football as a space of contestation, examining the creative ways in which women have negotiated opportunities to play football and the friendships and sociality that emerge from playing the game. The book examines resistance to historically bound cultural norms that privileges men’s participation, reflecting on mixed-sex football, femininity, embodiment, physical capital, and authenticity, and considers how this deeper understanding of football cultures might help in the future development of the women’s game.

This is fascinating reading for anybody with an interest in football, women’s sport, the sociology of sport, or gender studies.

part I|51 pages

Pathways for Marginalised Voices

chapter Chapter 1|18 pages

Women's Football, Culture, and Identity

chapter Chapter 2|31 pages

Researching Women's Football

Place, Nostalgia, and Voice

part II|49 pages

Development, Opportunities, and Friendships

chapter Chapter 3|22 pages

Formative Footballing Experiences

Early Aspirations and Playing Football at School

part III|59 pages

Encouraging Inclusivity

chapter Chapter 5|24 pages

Developing Football Players

Challenges and Reconfiguration

chapter Chapter 6|21 pages

Voice, English Football Culture, and Encouraging Inclusivity

Contestation and Change

chapter Chapter 7|12 pages

Women's Football in a Contested Culture

A Reflection on Voice and Nostalgia