The Gay Games: A History

Author:   Caroline Symons
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780415688666


Pages:   302
Publication Date:   01 May 2012
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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The Gay Games: A History


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Full Product Details

Author:   Caroline Symons
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.521kg
ISBN:  

9780415688666


ISBN 10:   0415688663
Pages:   302
Publication Date:   01 May 2012
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"Introduction 1. Dancing with Tom Waddell 2. ""We are Normal"": ""Challenge in 1982"": Gay Games I 3. ""We are Healthy"": ""Triumph in 1986"": Gay Games II and the Procession of the Arts 4. Gay Games in Transition: ""Celebration 90"": Gay Games III and Cultural Festival 5. Going Global: The Internationalization of the Gay Games Movement 6. Big, Brash and Bold: ""Unity 94"": Gay Games IV and Cultural Festival 7: The Gay Way To Europe and the World: Gay Games V and Cultural Festival 8: ""Under New Skies"": Gay Games VI and Cultural Festival 9: ""Transexed Conundrums"" 10: Montreal – No – Chicago! Or Back To Basics: Chicago 2006 and the Split within the International GLBTI Sports Movement Conclusion"

Reviews

"""Caroline Symons remedies this with an impressive history that not only provides an absorbing account of each of the Gay Games from 1982 to 2006, but shows how their stories and tensions can shed light on many of the analytical concerns that have come to the centre of academic scholarship over the same time period. Theories of sexuality, gender, identities, bodies, politics, place, race, masculinity, femininity and many more, are put to work – explicated, complicated, and contested – to help us understand more fully the triumphs and trials of these games."" —Matthew Klugman, Victoria University ""It is clear that Caroline Symon’s (2010) The Gay Games: A History will be an essential contribution to this field of study. This is not just because of Symon’s exhaustive work on the Gay Games and their participants analyzes individual athletes; but it is also because Symons promotes our understanding of the inter-connectedness between social movements and gay/lesbian athleticism at on an increasingly global scale. This work is crucial for understanding the relationships between identity politics, sport, and sexual minorities; and it is a necessary work."" —Eric Anderson, University of Bath Symons' book, The Gay Games: A History, has won this year's Australian Society for Sports History (ASSH) Book Award prize. ASSH said Symons' book was a ""meticulously researched and sophisticated social history"" and promoted ""centrality, as opposed to the marginality"" of GLBT people in sport. ""The Committee considers The Gay Games: A History an engaging narrative that reveals both the lived experiences and personal stories of individuals, groups and communities involved in the organisation and participation of various Games"". - ASSH - www.starobserver.com.au"


Caroline Symons remedies this with an impressive history that not only provides an absorbing account of each of the Gay Games from 1982 to 2006, but shows how their stories and tensions can shed light on many of the analytical concerns that have come to the centre of academic scholarship over the same time period. Theories of sexuality, gender, identities, bodies, politics, place, race, masculinity, femininity and many more, are put to work - explicated, complicated, and contested - to help us understand more fully the triumphs and trials of these games. -Matthew Klugman, Victoria University It is clear that Caroline Symon's (2010) The Gay Games: A History will be an essential contribution to this field of study. This is not just because of Symon's exhaustive work on the Gay Games and their participants analyzes individual athletes; but it is also because Symons promotes our understanding of the inter-connectedness between social movements and gay/lesbian athleticism at on an increasingly global scale. This work is crucial for understanding the relationships between identity politics, sport, and sexual minorities; and it is a necessary work. -Eric Anderson, University of Bath Symons' book, The Gay Games: A History, has won this year's Australian Society for Sports History (ASSH) Book Award prize. ASSH said Symons' book was a meticulously researched and sophisticated social history and promoted centrality, as opposed to the marginality of GLBT people in sport. The Committee considers The Gay Games: A History an engaging narrative that reveals both the lived experiences and personal stories of individuals, groups and communities involved in the organisation and participation of various Games . - ASSH - www.starobserver.com.au


Caroline Symons remedies this with an impressive history that not only provides an absorbing account of each of the Gay Games from 1982 to 2006, but shows how their stories and tensions can shed light on many of the analytical concerns that have come to the centre of academic scholarship over the same time period. Theories of sexuality, gender, identities, bodies, politics, place, race, masculinity, femininity and many more, are put to work - explicated, complicated, and contested - to help us understand more fully the triumphs and trials of these games. Matthew Klugman, Victoria University It is clear that Caroline Symon's (2010) The Gay Games: A History will be an essential contribution to this field of study. This is not just because of Symon's exhaustive work on the Gay Games and their participants analyzes individual athletes; but it is also because Symons promotes our understanding of the inter-connectedness between social movements and gay/lesbian athleticism at on an increasingly global scale. This work is crucial for understanding the relationships between identity politics, sport, and sexual minorities; and it is a necessary work. Eric Anderson, University of Bath The Gay Games provide an alternative sport setting, showcasing international athletes who are gay, lesbian, transgender, and bisexual. To synthesize the Gay Games and help readers understand them, Symons (sport and exercise science, Victoria Univ., Australia) shares interviews with those who have participated in and organized the event; she also examined hundreds of documents. The first Gay Games were in 1982, in San Francisco. Symons begins there and goes through the 2006 games (hosted by Chicago), providing the first historical account of the games and exploring their significance in the broader realm of gay and lesbian history. The contemporary issues of politics, doping, and gender play out in the Gay Games as they do elsewhere. Symons discusses these and the tensions and confrontations in the lesbian and gay community, which provide challenges and have a bearing on the future of the games. A valuable resource for those interested in international sport, gender, and sexuality studies. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates; graduate students. M. E. Beagle, Berea College


Author Information

Caroline Symons in Senior Lecturer in the School of Sport and Exercise Science and the Institute of Sport, Exercise and Active Living at Victoria University, Australia.

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