AndersonK. (1999) ‘Snowboarding: The construction of gender in an emerging sport’, Journal of Sport and Social Issues23: 55–79.
2.
BealB. (1996) ‘Alternative masculinity and its effect on gender relations in the subculture of skateboarding’, Journal of Sports Behaviour19: 204–220.
3.
BealB. (2002) ‘The shifting landscape of an alternative sport: Commercialization and the changing meaning of skateboarding’. Paper presented at Sport and the All-Consuming Cultures of [Pleasure, University of Surrey Roehampton.
4.
BealB.WeidmanL. (2003) ‘Authenticity in the skateboarding world’: In RinehartR.SydorS. (eds) To the Extreme: Alternative Sports Inside and Out. Albany: SUNY Press.
5.
BoothD. (2001) Australian Beach Cultures: The History of Sun, Sand and Surf. London: Frank Cass Publishers.
6.
BoyleR.HaynesR. (2000) Power Play: Sport, the Media and Popular Culture. Harlow: Longman.
7.
NelsonM. Burton (1996) The Stronger Women Get. the More Men Love Football: Sexism and the Culture of Sports. London: The Women's Press Ltd.
8.
CarringtonB. (1998) ‘“Football's coming home” But whose home and do we want it? Nation, football and the politics of exclusion’: 101–123 in BrownA. (ed.) Fanatics! Power, identity and fandom in football. London/NY: Routledge.
9.
CarringtonB. (1999) ‘Too many St Georges crosses to bear’: 71–86 in PerrymanM. (ed.) The Ingerland Factor: Home Truths from Football. Edinburgh: Mainstream publishing.
10.
CarringtonB.McDonaldI. (eds) (2001) ‘Race’. Sport and British Society. London: Routledge.
CraikJ. (1994) The Face of Fashion. London/NY: Routledge.
13.
CrolleyL. (1999) ‘Lads will be lads’: 59–70 in PerrymanM. (ed.) The Ingerland Factor Home Truths from Football. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing.
14.
DavisL. (1997) Hegemonic Masculinity in Sports Illustrated. Albany: State University of New York Press.
15.
DuncanM. (1990) ‘Sports photographs and sexual difference: Images of women and men in the 1984 and 1988 Olympic Games’, Sociology of Sport Journal7: 22–43.
16.
DuncanM.MessnerM. (1994) Gender Stereotyping in Televised Sports: A Follow-up to the 1989 Study. The Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles.
17.
DyerR. (1987) Heavenly Bodies: Film Stars and Society. London: Macmillan.
18.
EdwardsT. (1997) Men in the Mirror Men's Fashion, Masculinity and Consumer Society. London: Cassell.
19.
FeatherstoneM. (1982) ‘The body in consumer culture’, Theory Culture and Society1: 18–33.
20.
FeatherstoneM. (1991) Consumer Culture and Postmodernism. London, Newbury Park, New Delhi: Sage Publications.
21.
FiskeJ. (1989) Reading the Popular. Unwin Hyman.
22.
GiddensA. (1991) Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age. Cambridge: Polity Press.
23.
HallS.JacquesM. (1989) ‘Introduction’: 11–20 in JaquesM. (ed.) New Times: The Changing Face of Politics in the 1990's. London: Lawrence and Wishart in association with Marxism Today.
24.
HargreavesJ. (1993) ‘Bodies Matter! Images of sport and female sexualisation’: 60–66 in BrackenridgeC. (ed.) Body Matters: Leisure Images and Lifestyles. Eastboune: LSA.
25.
HargreavesJ. (1994) Sporting Females: Critical Issues in the History and Sociology of Women's Sports. London and New York: Routledge.
26.
HenioR. (2000) ‘What is so punk about snowboarding?’, Journal of Sport and Social Issues24: 176–191.
27.
JacksonP.StevensonN.BrooksK. (2001) Making Sense of Men's Magazines. Cambridge: Polity.
28.
JacquesM. (1997) ‘Worshipping the body at altar of sport’, The Observer18–19.
29.
JamesonF. (1991) Postmodernism or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. London/NY: Verso.
30.
KuszK. (2001) ‘“I want to be a minority”: The politics of youthful masculinities in sport and popular culture in 1990s America’, Journal of Sport and Social Issues25: 390–416.
31.
LashS.UrryJ. (1987) The End of Organized Capitalism. Cambridge: Polity Press.
32.
McRobbieA. (1982) ‘The politics of feminist research: Between talk, text and action’, Feminist Review12:46–57.
33.
McRobbieA. (1999) ‘Pecs and penises: The meaning of girlie culture’: 112–131 in McRobbieA. (ed.) In the culture society: Art, fashion and popular music. London: Routledge.
34.
MessnerM.DunbarM.HuntD. (2000) ‘The televised sports manhood formula’, Journal of Sport and Social Issues24: 380–394.
35.
MessnerM.SaboD. (1990) Sport, Men and the Gender Order: Critical Feminist Perspectives. Champaign Illinois: Human Kinetic Books.
36.
MidolN.BroyerG. (1995) ‘Towards an anthropological analysis of new sport cultures: The case of whiz sports in France’, Sociology of Sport Journal12: 204–212.
37.
MortF. (1998) ‘Boy's Own? Masculinity, style and popular culture’: In ChapmanR.RutherfordJ. (eds) Male Order: Unwrapping Masculinity. London: Lawrence & Wishart.
38.
MortF. (1996) Cultures of Consumption: Masculinities and Social Space in Late Twentieth Century Britain. London: Routledge.
39.
MulveyL. (2000) ‘Visual pleasure and narrative cinema’: 483–495 in StamR.MillerT. (eds) Film and Theory: An Anthology. Oxford: Blackwell.
40.
NealeS. (1983) ‘Masculinity as spectacle’, Screen24: 2–16.
41.
NixonS. (1996) Hard Looks: Masculinities. Spectatorship and Contemporary Consumption. London: UCL Press.
42.
NixonS. (1997) ‘Exhibiting masculinity’: 291–330 in HallS. (ed.) Representation: Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices. London: Sage.
43.
RinehartR. (1999) ‘Babes on boards: Women as co-opted sports models’. Paper presented at North American Sociology of Sport Association, Cleveland.
44.
Rorty (1989) Contingency, Irony and Solidarity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
45.
RoweD. (1999) Sport. Culture and the Media. Buckingham: Open University Press.
46.
SchulzeL. (1990) ‘On the muscles’: 59–78 in HerzogC. (ed.) Fabrications: Costume and the Female Body. New York: Routledge.
47.
ShillingC. (1993) The Body and Social Theory. London: Sage.
48.
StedmanL. (1997) ‘From Gidget to Gonad Man: Surfers, feminists and postmodernisation’, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology33: 75–90.
49.
StrangerM. (1999) ‘The aesthetics of risk: A study of surfing’, International Review for the Sociology of Sport34(3): 265–276.
50.
ThorntonS. (1995) Club Cultures: Music. Media and Subcultural Capital. Cambridge: Polity Press.
51.
TomlinsonA. (2001) ‘Sport, leisure and style’: 399–415 in MorleyD.RobinsK. (eds) British Cultural Studies Geography, Nationality and Identity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
52.
TreasS. (1999) ‘Sports, space and in-your-face masculinity in skateboarding magazines’. Paper presented at Pacific Sociological Conference, San Diego.
53.
UrryJ. (1990) The Tourist's Gaze: Leisure and Travel in Contemporary Societies. London: Sage.
54.
WhannelG. (2002) Media Sport Stars: Masculinities and Moralities. London: Routledge.
55.
WheatonB. (1997) Consumption, Lifestyle and Gendered Identities in Post-Modern Sports: The Case of Windsurfing. Unpublished PhD, University of Brighton.
56.
WheatonB. (2000a) ‘Just Do it: Consumption, commitment and identity in the windsurfing subculture’, Sociology of Sport Journal17: 254–274.
57.
WheatonB. (2000b) ‘“New Lads?” Masculinities and the New Sport participant’. Men and Masculinities2: 436–458.
58.
WheatonB. (2002) ‘Babes on the beach, women in the surf: Researching gender, power and difference in the windsurfing culture’: In SugdenJ.TomlinsonA. (eds) Power Games: Theory and method for a critical sociology of sport. London: Routledge.
59.
WheatonB.BealB. (2003) ‘“Keeping it real”: Subcultural media and the discourses of authenticity in alternative sport’, International Review for the Sociology of Sport.
60.
WheatonB.TomlinsonA. (1998) ‘The changing gender order in sport? The case of Windsurfing’, Journal of Sport and Social Issues22: 252–274.
61.
WhelehanI. (2000) Overloaded: Popular Culture and the Future of Feminism. London: The Women's Press.
62.
WhitsonD. (1990) ‘Sport in the social construction of masculinity’: 19–30 in MessnerM.SaboD. (eds) Sport. Men and the Gender Order: Critical Feminist Perspectives. Champaign. Illinois: Human Kinetic Books.