ABSTRACT
Although socio-cultural issues in relation to women within the fields of sport and exercise have been extensively researched, this research has tended to concentrate on the Western world. Women, Sport and Exercise in the Asia-Pacific Region moves the conversation away entirely from Western contexts to discuss these issues with a sole focus on the geographic Asia-Pacific region.
Presenting a diverse range of empirical case studies, from bodybuilding in Kazakhstan and Thailand, karate in Afghanistan, and women’s rugby in Fiji to women’s soccer in North Korea and netball in Papua New Guinea, the book demonstrates how sports may be used as a lens to examine the historical, socio-cultural and political specificities of non-Western and post-colonial societies. It also explores the complex ways in which non-Western women resist as well as accommodate sport and exercise-related sociocultural oppression, helping us to better understand the nexus of sport, exercise, gender, sexuality and power in the Asia-Pacific area.
This is a fascinating and important resource for students of sports studies, sports management, sport development, social sciences and gender studies, as well as an excellent read for academics and researchers with an interest in sport, exercise, gender and post-colonial studies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|54 pages
Nation-building and nationalism
chapter 3|12 pages
The politics of female football in North Korea
chapter 5|12 pages
Her ‘soldiering’ on
part II|66 pages
Sport, physical activity and empowerment
chapter 6|17 pages
‘The right way for me to do things for me’
chapter 8|13 pages
Girls and sports in Samoa
chapter 9|15 pages
Discursive construction of athletic nutrition in bodybuilding
part III|76 pages
Challenges, change and development
part IV|29 pages
Transnationality and globalisation