Journal of Sport History

Editor: Daniel A. Nathan

DETAILS

Current Volume: 51 (2024)
Issued 3 times per year (Spring, Summer, and Fall)
ISSN: 0094-1700
eISSN: 2155-8450

About

The Journal of Sport History (JSH) promotes the study of historical, social, and cultural aspects of sports. We invite the submission of scholarly articles, research notes, documents, and commentaries exploring the development of sports; their societal impact; their intersection with politics, economics, and identity; and more. Oral histories and book and film reviews are assigned by the Editor.

The JSH also supports historically informed work from disciplines such as anthropology, cultural studies, media studies, and sociology, among other fields of study. With topics ranging from American football to cycling in South Africa to the Seoul Olympics and beyond, JSH is proud to publish a wide selection of sports scholarship about the past with international appeal, written by a diverse array of contributors. Submissions may include historical case studies, biographical analyses, and broader analyses of the social and cultural significance of sports. The JSH also welcomes interdisciplinary works between sports and other fields of study as well as methodological discussions concerning the study of sport history. 

The Journal of Sport History is published on behalf of The North American Society for Sport History and supports its mission to advance the study of the history of sports by fostering scholarly research.


Indexes

America: History and Life, Brepols, Current Abstracts, EBSCO, Historical Abstracts (Online), MLA International Bibliography, Periodicals Index Online, Poetry & Short Story Reference Center, PubMed, Scopus, SPORTDiscus with Full Text, Sports Medicine & Education Index, TOC Premier


MEMBERSHIP RATES

The NASSH membership period is from January 1 through December 31.

Click here to subscribe.

Individuals:1 Year
Print Only$60
Retired: Print Only$30
Sustaining: Print Only$95
Life: Print Only$700
Students:1 Year
Print Only$30
Institutions:1 Year
Print Only$150
Online Only $208*
Print + Online$286*
*Institutional 'Online Only' and 'Print + Online' subscriptions must be purchased through the Scholarly Publishing Collective.

Non-U.S. Postage: $10 Canada/Mexico, $15 Other Non-U.S. Locations

Single Issues: $15


ONLINE + PRINT ADVERTISING

The print ad rates for all our titles can be found in the 2024 journals catalog/rate card.

Click here to download the PDF version

Editors

Editor
Daniel A. Nathan, Skidmore College, U.S.

Associate Editors
Terry Anne Scott, Institute for Common Power, U.S.
Travis Vogan, University of Iowa, U.S.

Book Review Editor
Dain TePoel, Commonwealth University of Pennsylvania, U.S.

Film, Media, and Museum Reviews Editor
Lisa Doris Alexander, Wayne State University, U.S.

Oral History Editor
Raja M. Rahim, Appalachian State University, U.S.

Past Editors
Murray G. Phillips, The University of Queensland, Australia
Maureen M. Smith, California State University, Sacramento, U.S.

Editorial Board

  • Daryl Adair, University of Technology, Australia
  • Carly Adams, University of Lethbridge, Canada
  • Douglas Booth, University of Otago, New Zealand
  • Nancy Bouchier, McMaster University, Canada
  • Mike Cronin, Boston College, Ireland
  • Caroline Daley, University of Auckland, New Zealand
  • Pascal Delhaye, University of Leuven, Belgium
  • Mark Dyreson, Pennsylvania State University, U.S.
  • Sarah K. Fields, University of Colorado, Denver, U.S.
  • Colin Howell, Saint Mary’s University, Canada
  • Mike Huggins, University of Cumbria, England
  • Thomas M. Hunt, University of Texas at Austin, U.S.
  • Brian M. Ingrassia, West Texas A&M University, U.S.
  • Martin Johnes, University of Swansea, Wales
  • Donald G. Kyle, University of Texas at Arlington, U.S.
  • Deane A. Lamont, St. Mary’s College, U.S.
  • Rita Liberti, California State University East Bay, U.S
  • Shelley Lucas, Boise State University, U.S.
  • Dave Lunt, Southern Utah University, U.S.
  • Malcolm MacLean, University of Gibraltar, Gibraltar
  • Tara Magdalinski, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
  • Louis Moore, Grand Valley State University, U.S.
  • Christine O'Bonsawin, University of Victoria, Canada
  • Catriona M. Parratt, University of Iowa, U.S.
  • Gertrud Pfister, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Steven A. Riess, Northeastern Illinois University, U.S.
  • Jaime Schultz, Pennsylvania State University, U.S.
  • Martha H. Verbrugge, Bucknell University, U.S.
  • Patricia Vertinsky, University of British Columbia, Canada
  • Chris Young, University of Cambridge, England

PDF Policy

PDFs are permitted and issued for the following:

  • Tenure dossier.
  • Special workshops the author is moderating.
  • Other requests to be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
  • All PDFs will include a statement of copyright and a provision that the articles will not be photocopied, distributed, or used for purposes other than the terms agreed to by UIP.

Preprints are permitted for:

  • University repositories; UIP requires a publication statement to be posted along with the preprint.
  • Some journals have their own established policies and procedures for preprints. Please be sure to first check their respective Web sites before sending your request.

Postprints are permitted for:

  • Non-profit archives and repositories; Articles must be at least one year old. UIP requires a publication statement to be posted along with the postprint and a link back to the journal of publication's home page on the UIP website.
  • Personal and commercial Web sites; Articles must be at least three years old. UIP requires a publication statement to be posted along with the postprint and a link back to the journal of publication's home page on the UIP website.

Please contact the Intellectual Property Manager for more information.

Please send all requests to:

Angela Burton
Intellectual Property Manager
UIP-RIGHTS@uillinois.edu

Submissions

The JSH is pleased to announce that it is moving to Scholastica for managing submissions and peer review as of February 1, 2024. To submit, visit: https://press-jsh.scholasticahq.com/. If you do not already have a Scholastica account, you will be prompted to create one. The previous submission portal, JSH Open Journal Systems, is no longer accepting new submissions. Manuscripts that were submitted to the JSH prior to February 1, 2024, are still active and are being processed. The JSH staff thanks contributors in advance for their patience during this transition. We are confident that Scholastica will improve the submission process, and we look forward to working with you. 


Journal of Sport History


General guidelines

• Authors should follow the Chicago Manual of Style.

• Manuscripts must be in English. If this is not the first language of the author, contributions should be checked for grammar and syntax, prior to submission, by a person fluent in academic English. It is not the responsibility of the editorial team to redraft articles into an acceptable form and manuscripts which do not meet the required standard will be returned. American conventions in spelling and punctuation should be used throughout.

• The author’s name should appear on the cover page only as manuscripts are evaluated anonymously.

• An abstract of no more than 150 words should be included at the beginning of the article.

• 3 or 4 "keywords" should be included at the beginning of the article following the abstract.

• The entire article, including block quotations, endnotes, and figure captions should be double-spaced with at least a one-inch margin on all sides. All pages should be numbered consecutively throughout. Manuscripts should not exceed 8,000 words including notes.

• Authors are responsible for obtaining any copyright permissions.

• Tables and graphs should be sent as separate files, not as part of the main text, and clear indication given as to their appropriate position within the article.

•  Illustrations are encouraged but not required. At submission stage an indication of suitable material is all that is necessary as precise details will be determined once an article has been accepted for publication.

• Articles should be submitted electronically to the Journal of Sport History online manuscript submission system. This secure, personalized resource will allow you to track your manuscript through each step of the review and acceptance process. To begin, click below to set up your personal account and upload your submission. Your transmitted material will be reviewed as soon as possible.

Submit to Journal of Sport History

Articles accepted for the Journal of Sport History should demonstrate international quality of scholarship, rigor and analysis. It would also be an advantage in terms of likely publication if the piece addresses a significant issue, even if only by contextualization, and is likely to be widely cited. All articles generally go to two referees, at least one (and preferably two) of whom are members of the Editorial Board. The comments of the reviewers are then edited and a collective review is sent to the author.

Style guide

• Notes, numbered consecutively, should appear within the text at the end of a sentence, even when referring to a direct quotation, with the full reference located at the end of the article. Notes must not exceed 100 – one way to achieve this is citation by paragraph where appropriate. Endnotes should not be used to provide additional commentary or information.

• Abbreviations – first mention of organizations should be provided in full, but thereafter should be abbreviated: for example, International Olympic Committee (IOC); National Football League (NFL); American Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).
Acronyms, however – for example, NATO, DNA, NASCAR – should not be expanded.

• Dates within text should be in the form July 12, 1958 but in references should be 12 July 1958.

• Numbers up to ninety-nine should be spelled out.

• Authors should follow the Chicago Manual of Style, for example:

Wray Vamplew, Pay Up and Play the Game (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 91.

Douglas Booth, "Sports Historians: What Do We Do? How Do We Do It?" in Deconstructing Sport History: A Postmodern Analysis, ed. Murray G. Phillips (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2006), 39.

Tara Kathleen Kelly, "The Still-Hunter and the Temptation Goats: Reconsidering the Meaning of the Hunt in American Culture, 1880-1914," Journal of Sport History 35.2 (2008): 285-301.

Patricia Campbell Warner, "Clothing the American Woman for Sport and Physical Education, 1860 to 1940" (Ph.D. diss., University of Minnesota, 1986), 72.

Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Robert Pear, "Wary Centrists Posing Challenge in Health Care Vote," New York Times, February 27, 2010, accessed February 28, 2010, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/28/us/politics/28health.html

A website reference need not be given in full but should include the basic information required for access, together with the date accessed, for example: http://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/article/60969 [accessed 28 May 2009]

An archive should be referenced as follows: Minutes of Meeting of Conference Directors, 1 June 1922, folder 5, box 84, Amos Alonzo Stagg Papers, University of Chicago Archives, Chicago, Illinois.

Latin abbreviations, other than Ibid. (for an immediate second reference) should be avoided.

A second citation should normally be in the form: Kelly, "The Still-Hunter," 289.

Illustrations

It is the responsibility of the author to obtain the appropriate permission for the use of any copyrighted materials.  If you do include illustrations, keep in mind that photos need to be scanned in greyscale at a minimum of 300 dpi for a 5x7 or 4x6; line art has to be a minimum of 1200 dpi; otherwise, they may not be able to be used.

Drafts of the illustrations may be submitted with the article during the review process but final versions, including an indication that permission has been obtained, must be submitted with the final version of the article.


Article Submission Guidelines

Journal of Sport History

General guidelines

• Authors should follow the Chicago Manual of Style.

• Manuscripts must be in English. If this is not the first language of the author, contributions should be checked for grammar and syntax, prior to submission, by a person fluent in academic English. It is not the responsibility of the editorial team to redraft articles into an acceptable form and manuscripts which do not meet the required standard will be returned. American conventions in spelling and punctuation should be used throughout.

• The author’s name should appear on the cover page only as manuscripts are evaluated anonymously.

• An abstract of no more than 150 words should be included at the beginning of the article.

• 3 or 4 "keywords" should be included at the beginning of the article following the abstract.

• The entire article, including block quotations, endnotes, and figure captions should be double-spaced with at least a one-inch margin on all sides. All pages should be numbered consecutively throughout. Manuscripts should not exceed 8,000 words including notes.

• Authors are responsible for obtaining any copyright permissions.

• Tables and graphs should be sent as separate files, not as part of the main text, and clear indication given as to their appropriate position within the article.

• Illustrations are encouraged but not required. At submission stage an indication of suitable material is all that is necessary as precise details will be determined once an article has been accepted for publication.

•Articles should be submitted electronically to the Journal of Sport History online manuscript submission system. This secure, personalized resource will allow you to track your manuscript through each step of the review and acceptance process. To begin, click here to set up your personal account and upload your submission. Your transmitted material will be reviewed as soon as possible.

Log into existing Manuscript Submission Upload account

Make a new Manuscript Submission Upload account

Articles accepted for the Journal of Sport History should demonstrate international quality of scholarship, rigor and analysis. It would also be an advantage in terms of likely publication if the piece addresses a significant issue, even if only by contextualization, and is likely to be widely cited. All articles generally go to two referees, at least one (and preferably two) of whom are members of the Editorial Board. The comments of the reviewers are then edited and a collective review is sent to the author.

Style guide

• Notes, numbered consecutively, should appear within the text at the end of a sentence, even when referring to a direct quotation, with the full reference located at the end of the article. Notes must not exceed 100 – one way to achieve this is citation by paragraph where appropriate. Endnotes should not be used to provide additional commentary or information.

• Abbreviations – first mention of organizations should be provided in full, but thereafter should be abbreviated: for example, International Olympic Committee (IOC); National Football League (NFL); American Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).
Acronyms, however – for example, NATO, DNA, NASCAR – should not be expanded.

• Dates within text should be in the form July 12, 1958 but in references should be 12 July 1958.

• Numbers up to ninety-nine should be spelled out.

• Authors should follow the Chicago Manual of Style, for example:

Wray Vamplew, Pay Up and Play the Game (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 91.

Douglas Booth, "Sports Historians: What Do We Do? How Do We Do It?" in Deconstructing Sport History: A Postmodern Analysis, ed. Murray G. Phillips (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2006), 39.

Tara Kathleen Kelly, "The Still-Hunter and the Temptation Goats: Reconsidering the Meaning of the Hunt in American Culture, 1880-1914," Journal of Sport History 35.2 (2008): 285-301.

Patricia Campbell Warner, "Clothing the American Woman for Sport and Physical Education, 1860 to 1940" (Ph.D. diss., University of Minnesota, 1986), 72.

Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Robert Pear, "Wary Centrists Posing Challenge in Health Care Vote," New York Times, February 27, 2010, accessed February 28, 2010, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/28/us/politics/28health.html

A website reference need not be given in full but should include the basic information required for access, together with the date accessed, for example: http://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/article/60969 [accessed 28 May 2009]

An archive should be referenced as follows: Minutes of Meeting of Conference Directors, 1 June 1922, folder 5, box 84, Amos Alonzo Stagg Papers, University of Chicago Archives, Chicago, Illinois.

Latin abbreviations, other than Ibid. (for an immediate second reference) should be avoided.

A second citation should normally be in the form: Kelly, "The Still-Hunter," 289.

Illustrations

It is the responsibility of the author to obtain the appropriate permission for the use of any copyrighted materials.  If you do include illustrations, keep in mind that photos need to be scanned in greyscale at a minimum of 300 dpi for a 5x7 or 4x6; line art has to be a minimum of 1200 dpi; otherwise, they may not be able to be used.

Drafts of the illustrations may be submitted with the article during the review process but final versions, including an indication that permission has been obtained, must be submitted with the final version of the article.


Research Note Submission Guidelines

Journal of Sport History

Research Notes of up to 3,000 words are invited for possible publication. These notes should specifically address methodological issues that are relevant and topical for sport historians. To submit a Research Note please follow the Submission Guidelines for articles.


Film, Museum and Media Review Submission Guidelines

Journal of Sport History

You must contact the FMMR editor BEFORE submitting a review. The FMMR Editor is Travis Vogan [travis-vogan@uiowa.edu]. Please contact him about FMMR submissions.

Guidelines
As always when writing, keep your audience in mind: your colleagues in the historical and socio-cultural study of sport.
Please go beyond plot summary and engage with the issues raised by the film(s)/exhibit(s) under consideration and the choices made by their directors and curators. Ideally you will engage with the historical issues raised, but JSH is open to a broader interrogation of socio-cultural issues.

Length

These word lengths are guidelines, but do what you can to adhere to them as closely as possible:
For reviews of single films and museum or online exhibits: 750-1000 words
For reviews of two films or exhibits: 1250-1500 words
For essays on three or more films: 1500-2000 words

Format

If you find it necessary to include citations within your review, please use endnotes in the Chicago style.
Please include a full citation for the media under review at the beginning of your review. Samples are below.

Film review
History of Physical Education in the United States
(2005). Written, produced and directed by James Holzknecht.
Castalia Media.
Distributed by Insight Media. 30 mins.

Media review
National Sport Information Centre in Australia
www.ausport.gov.au/nsic/contacts.asp

Museum review
National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame
1431 W. Taylor Street
Chicago, Illinois 60607
Telephone: (312) 226-5566; FAX: (312) 226-5678;
E-mail: rich@niashf.org
Website: <www.niashf.org> [12 May 2007]
Open: Monday through Friday 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. and Saturday
and Sunday 11:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Private tours are available.
Handicapped accessible.
Admission: $5.00.

Please include your name as you wish it to appear, along with your institutional affiliation.

Deadline and Submission
Submit your review within three months of receiving these guidelines. If you find yourself unable to complete this review, please let the FMMR Editor know as soon as possible.

Book Review Submission Guidelines

Journal of Sport History

For Book Publishers

Publishers wishing to have their books considered for review in the Journal of Sport History should email the book review editor, Dain TePoel, at dht1117@commonwealthu.edu. 

The Journal of Sport History does NOT accept books mailed directly to the book review editor.  Publishers interested in having a book reviewed in the Journal of Sport History should email publicity information and a link to the book online to dht1117@commonwealthu.edu



General guidelines

Book reviews should be no longer than 1,000 words.

Reviews should contain a thoughtful and critical discussion of the book assessing the author's thesis/purpose, organization, use of sources, and the contribution of the book to the field of sport history and/or related fields of interest to the readers of the Journal. The Journal of Sport History addresses a wide audience in the history of sport and related topics in social and cultural history, and insightful, informative book reviews are a vital segment of the publication.

All reviews should follow the Chicago Manual of Style regarding formatting and other stylistic points, and should use American spellings. Reviewers should not use second person and should keep use of first person to a minimum.

Interested in Reviewing?


Individuals interested in reviewing books for the Journal of Sport History should complete the Reviewer Information Form.

Deadline

Book reviews are due two months after receipt of the book. If you anticipate difficulty with this deadline, please contact the book review editor at jshbookreviews@gmail.com to discuss the deadline.
For review essays, the appropriate length is at the discretion of the reviewer; usually review essays are more substantive in length than regular book reviews, and include more than one book for discussion.



FORMAT

Bibliography

Bibliographic information on the reviewed book should appear at the top of the page. Include as much information as possible in this section, including the price of clothbound and paperback editions. The bibliographic information should appear in the following order:

Author's last name, First name. Title of the book. Place of publication: Publisher, date published. Number of pages in preface + in main text. Listing of features such as notes, index, color plates, illustrations, bibliographic essay, appendices. Price.

Example:

Moore, Lou. I Fight for a Living: Boxing and the Battle for Black Manhood, 1880-1915. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2017. Pp. X + 230. Index and illustrations. $95.00 hb, $27.95 pb, $25.16 eb.

Nauright, John, and Tony Collins, eds. The Rugby World in the Professional Era. New York: Routledge. Pp. 191. Index. $145.00, hb. $54.95, eb.

hb: hardback or cloth bound book
pb: paperback book
eb: e-book

Please list prices in U.S. dollars, unless a publisher only sells the book in another country. (Some publishers have different sites for multiple countries listing prices in local currencies. In these instances, please use the U.S. site.)

Text:

After publication information, skip three single lines and begin the text of the review.
Book reviews should be written in 12-point Times New Roman Font, and the review itself should be double-spaced.

References:

If you are quoting from the book under review, use page numbers following the quotation.

Example:

Cayleff explains, "Among related reforms that received attention and adoption was physical education" (117).

Ordinarily, book reviews do not include foot or endnotes quoting a work other than the book under review, put these in parentheses after your statement(s).

Example:

Another book on urban culture includes a discussion of the turn-of-the-century (David Nasaw, Children of the City, 27-30).

Reviewer Name and Affiliation:

At the end of the review, skip three single lines, note your name with your affiliation below in italics.

Example:

David Welky
University of Central Arkansas

SUBMISSION
Email the final copy of your review to the book review editor at jshbookreviews@gmail.com

Featured Articles



Conceptualizing “Small-Time” College Athletics: The Fracture of the “Little Nineteen” Conference in the 1930s
Brian M. Ingrassia
https://doi.org/10.5406/jsporthistory.47.3.0191

“Heading for the big time”: South Africans and the North American Soccer League, 1968–84
Chris Bolsmann
https://doi.org/10.5406/jsporthistory.47.3.0210
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5406/jsporthistory.47.3.0210?refreqid=excelsior%3Ac473cd8a3f9aa95c03c9d64ea7af8635

“National Responsibility”: A History of Willful Nostalgia in the Canadian Football League
Ben Andrews and Craig Greenham
https://doi.org/10.5406/jsporthistory.47.3.0226
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5406/jsporthistory.47.3.0226

Superfood or Superficial? Plasmon and the Birth of the Supplement Industry
Conor Heffernan
https://doi.org/10.5406/jsporthistory.47.3.0243

Bravo Segrave!: Sir Henry Segrave and the Meaning of the World Land Speed Record
Jeffrey Segrave
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/886385

“We Want Lamonica”: The Kemp-Lamonica Quarterback Controversy and the Populist Education of Jack Kemp
Paul Miller
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/886386

The 100% Wrong Club: Strategic Congregations, Black College Football, and the History of Atlanta's Biggest Black Booster Club
Cam Mallett
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/uip/jsh/article/49/3/203/383009/The-100-Wrong-ClubStrategic-Congregations-Black

“The Most Wonderful Specimen of Man”: Eugen Sandow, Science, and Selling the Muscular Body
Jacqueline Brady
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/uip/jsh/article/49/3/221/383028/The-Most-Wonderful-Specimen-of-Man-Eugen-Sandow

Second-Class Waves for Second-Class Citizens: The Modern Roots of Sexism in Surf Culture
Scott Laderman
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/uip/jsh/article/49/3/249/383029/Second-Class-Waves-for-Second-Class-CitizensThe

“The Heart Has Its Reasons”: The Curious Case of Conrad Cotter
John D. Fair
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/uip/jsh/article/49/3/272/383026/The-Heart-Has-Its-Reasons-The-Curious-Case-of

"The Right Sort of Girl Is a Tomboy": Representations of Black Athletic Girlhood in the Early Twentieth-Century Black Press
Samantha White
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/918693

Annihilating Space: Motor Sport and the Commodification of Movement
Brian M. Ingrassia
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/918694

How Major League Baseball Parks Reveal the White Middle-Class's Views on Cities
Seth S. Tannenbaum
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/918695

The Rise of Ping-Pong as a Sport in France (1932–1933)
Kilian Mousset, Jean-Nicolas Renaud, Christian Vivier
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/918696

In with the Old: The United Nations and Sport for Development and Peace, 1940s–1990s
Rob Millington
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/918697

Populist Dimensions of Sport Histories: Practice and Discourse
Alan Tomlinson
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/920418

Ethnonationalist Engagements, Historic Norms, and the Politics of Sport in American Culture
Douglas Hartmann
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/920419

On Populism, Fascism, and the MAGA Coalition's Uses of Sport
Kyle W. Kusz
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/920420

Playing the Populist: Trump, Football, and the Long Southern Strategy
Adam Berg
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/920421

"Football is …": Populism, (Homo)nationalism, and Strategies for New NFL Audiences
Dafna Kaufman
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/920422

“Oft Incandescent on the Green Sward”: The Incipient Development of Lawn Tennis in Ontario, 1870–1900
Robert J. Lake
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/uip/jsh/article/50/3/315/387758/Oft-Incandescent-on-the-Green-Sward-The-Incipient

“It's All About the U”: How University of Miami Football Challenged Reagan's America
Kate Aguilar
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/uip/jsh/article/50/3/344/387752/It-s-All-About-the-U-How-University-of-Miami

Striking for Victory: The Women's International Bowling Congress's World War II Effort
Janet Woolum
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/uip/jsh/article/50/3/360/387751/Striking-for-VictoryThe-Women-s-International

The Sun Rises on Coney Island: Japanese Competitive Eaters, Sportification, and the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest as Global Spectacle
Zachary R. Bigalke
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/uip/jsh/article/50/3/377/387763/The-Sun-Rises-on-Coney-IslandJapanese-Competitive

Too Deadly: Tracking Sport Histories with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities
Gary Osmond
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/uip/jsh/article/50/3/395/387759/Too-DeadlyTracking-Sport-Histories-with-Aboriginal

Using a Mixed-Methods Approach to Examine the Expanding Reach of Body Classification into the Twenty-First Century
Aishwarya Ramachandran, Stephen Chignell, Yoonseok Choi, Patricia Vertinsky
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/935872

The Red and the Black: Lester Rodney, the Daily Worker and the Stolen Legacy of Wendell Smith
Henry D. Fetter
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/935873

Rethinking Technological Change in Sport: The Flexible Case of the Fiberglass Vaulting Pole
Jaime Schultz
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/935874

At the Bicycle Races: Global Sporting Culture and National Belonging at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century, 1899–1913
Nathan Cardon, Matthew Brown, Martin Hurcombe
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/935875

Antecedent and Aftermath: A History of Synchronized Swimming
Synthia Sydnor
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/34/article/935876