Paratexto Acesso aberto

Index

2022; Elsevier BV; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1108/s1476-285420220000015028

ISSN

1476-2854

Tópico(s)

Sport and Mega-Event Impacts

Resumo

Citation (2022), "Index", Sanderson, J. (Ed.) Sport, Social Media, and Digital Technology (Research in the Sociology of Sport, Vol. 15), Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, pp. 241-247. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1476-285420220000015028 Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited Copyright © 2022 by Emerald Publishing Limited INDEX Abuse of athletes, 190 athletes, 230 digital, 195 Abuser, secrecy, anonymity and power of, 195–196 Abusive behaviour, 190 Activism, 33, 41 Activist politics and visibilities, 33 African-American athlete, 71–72 double standard for, 153–155 Alphabet soup of sport fan behaviors, 110–111 American Psychiatric Association (APA), 130 Anatamo-politics’, 168–169 Anglo-American cultures, 129 Anonymity of abuser, 195–196 Anthropometry, 210 Anti-racist position, 77–79 Antunovic documents, 2–3 Anxiousness, 228–229 Associated Press Sports Editors (ASPE), 13–14 Athlete(s), 15, 18, 188, 224 abuse of, 190 activism, 146–147 athlete mental health and well-being, 226–227 athlete mental health and well-being and social media, 228–229 athlete self-presentation online, 188–189 commonality in terms of athletic ability, 225 experience, 225 implications for, 172–174 labor, 226 mental health, 224–225 mother profile, 95–96 retirement, 176–177 social media and social change for mental health and well-being, 232–234 virtual maltreatment and athlete mental health and well-being, 229–232 “Athletic labor of femininity”, 32 Australian Football League (AFL), 58–59 Basking in reflected glory (BIRGing), 110 Battle of the Blades (BOTB), 96 ‘Beautiful game’, 68 Behavioural ‘nudges’, 178–179 Big Data, 206–209, 212 Bikini Body Guide (BBG), 40 Biometrics, 206–210, 217 Black Lives Matter (BLM), 3, 56, 68, 76–77 Blogs, 16 ‘Boardroom racism’, 77–78 ‘Box ticking’ exercise, 79 British Social Attitude Survey (BSAS), 130 Categorisation, 77 ‘Change the Routine’, 195–196 China Central Television (CCTV), 157 Chinese Basketball Association (CBA), 157 ‘Circum-social interaction’, 190–191 Civil Rights Movement, 149 Cloke, Travis (Australian Football League player), 224–225 ‘Coaching mode’, 175 Commonwealth Games, 59 Compilation, 77 Computing technologies, 207 Contagion effect, 192 Contemporary sport, 207 Conversational analysis (CA), 199 “Counterhegemonic discursive practice”, 13 COVID, 217 Creative Native, 19–20 Cutting Off Reflected Failure (CORFing), 110 Cyber-mechanisms of abuse, 192 Cyberbullying, 192, 228–229 Cyberstalking, 192 Cyborg theory, 187 Data association, 210–211 collection, 211 science, 216 Datafication, 206 Davies, Alphonso (Bayern Munich Footballer), 230–231 Decontextualisation, 77 ‘Delegation’, 175 “Democratizing” effect, 56–57 Denial of structural racism, 79–81 Digital abuse, 195 Digital activism, 18, 134–135 Digital communities for advocacy, 15–18 Digital divide, 211 Digital ethics, 97 Digital Instagram stories, 96 Digital media, 17–18, 20 Digital platforms, 12, 15, 19 “Digital pruning”, 36–37 Digital research ethics, 40 ‘Digital sociology’, 187 Digital spaces, 186 lack of regulation in, 194–195 Digital sublime, 212 Digital technologies, 1–2, 5, 30, 186, 192, 210–211 and sport, 187–188 Direct online communication, 191 Disability, 230 Discriminatory abuse, 230 ‘Docility’, 168–169, 175 Elite athlete, 225 big and small instagram stories, 95–96 data collection, 96–97 digital ethics, 97 digital landscape, 91–92 small story, 100 identities and lives, 91 Instagram, 93–94 mental health of, 224 mothers, 90 narrative inquiry, 94–95 narrative thematic analysis, 97–98 post-partum big story, 98–100 well-being of, 224 working mum and new mumtrepeneur’ small story, 101–102 Elite-level athletes, 128 Emotional abuse, 230 English Football League (EFL), 73–74, 135 English Premier League (EPL), 136 eSports, 118–119 Ethnicity, 225 Experience abuse in virtual spaces, 192 Expert Consensus Statement, 224 Facebook, 187–188 Fan-athlete interactions, 192 Feelings of anxiousness, 228–229, 231–232 Female athletes, 191, 226–227 Festinger’s theory, 108–109 Folau, Israel (Australian Rugby player), 231 Football, 68, 212 articulations of anti-racist position, 77–79 denial of structural racism, 79–81 fandom and social media, 74–76 qualitative content analysis approach, 77 Rooney Rule, 69, 71–74 English football, 73–74 structural racism, 70–71 systemic racism, 68, 70–71 UK football management, 76 Football Offences Act, 75 Foucault, Michel, 168–169 ‘Free speech’, 194 Freedom of speech, 193–194 Gender, 225 gender-panicked culture, 129 questioning, 230 Gendered identities, 114–115 Glass ceiling, 70 Glory Out of Refelected Failure (GORFing), 115–116 ‘Go with flow’ approach, 99–100 Harris, Tayla, 230 Hate speech, 56–57 Hegemonic masculinity, 16–17, 52, 188–189 Hegemonic practices, 12–15 Heteronormativity, 53, 59 Home Office, 75 Homophobia, 51–52, 54–55, 58–59 apex of, 130–131 “Homophobic language”, 54 “Homosexually-themed language”, 54 Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), 156 “Hypermasculinity”, 129 “Imagined communities”, 108 Inclusive Masculinity Theory (IMT), 52 Information systems, 206 Instagram, 93–94, 187–188 big and small Instagram stories, 95–96 International Olympic Committee (IOC), 224 Internationalism, 112 Internet, masculinity and sport and, 56–60 Internet-based social media, 187 Intersectionality approach, 230 “Jordan era”, 149 “Kick it Out” (anti-racism football group), 230–231 Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, and queer community (LGBTIQ community), 231 LGBT community, 53 Life (magazine), 206 London Olympic Games, 224 Maladaptive PSI, 191 Masculinity, 128 and internet, 56–60 language, 54–56 and sexualities, 128–135 in sport, 50 and sport relationship, 50–53 Mental health, 5, 225 athlete mental health and well-being, 226–227 awareness, 232 disclosures, 233–234 disorders, 224 of elite athletes, 224 social media and, 227–228 sociological attributes of, 226 stigmatization of, 226 of young athletes, 227 Minority Candidate(s), 73–74 Mobile smartphones, 186 Modern sport, 207 Motherhood, 90 and sport in cultural context, 91–92 sportswomen and, 93–94 Motherhood and Olympics, 91 Narrative inquiry, 94–95 Narrative thematic analysis, 97–98 Nassar, Larry, 195–196 Nation’s athletes, 116–118 National Basketball Association (NBA), 4 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), 78, 154 National Football League (NFL), 59–60, 69, 146–147 National Hockey League (NHL), 59–60 National identity, 108 alphabet soup of sport fan behaviors, 110–111 bonds to social media, 111–112 in future social media, 118–121 gendered identities, 114–115 GORFing, 115–116 nation’s athletes, 116–118 in social media and sport, 112–114 sociology informs nationalism, 108–110 Nationalism, 4, 112, 150, 152 sociology informs, 108–110 Natural language processing (NLP), 199 Negative psychological implications of Twitter, 229 Negotiating intensive mothering and career’ big story, 98 Neoliberal post-feminist approach, 189 Neoliberalism, 18 Non-accidental violence, 229 Non-athletes, 231 Non-direct online communication, 191 Non-virtual relationships, 190 North American Society for Sociology of Sport (NASSS), 11 Objective tools, 208 Office of Communications (Ofcom), 192 Old Boy’ Networks, 72 “One country, two systems” framework, 156 Online abuse, 198, 229 sport, 194 Online child sexual grooming, 192 Online coercion, 192 Online environment. See Virtual environment Online harassment, 14 Online media, 189 Online social commentary, 199 Online spaces, 188, 193–194 Online toxicity, 191–192 Online vilification, 194 “Organic intellectuals”, 212–213 Para-athletes, 231 Parasocial interaction (PSI), 190 ‘Participatory surveillance’, 174 Patriotism, 111 Patriotism, 111–112 ‘Perfect tool’, 193 Peterson, Ben (Head of Player Health and Performance for San Francisco 49ers), 208 Phelps, Michael (American swimmer), 224 Phoenix Suns, 147 Physical abuse, 230 Physical culture, 33, 40 Physically active women, 31–38 social media by, 31–38 ‘Political correctness’, 193 Politics, 147 golden state warriors, 153 nationalism, sport and social media, 150–152 shut up and dribble, double standard for African-American, 153–155 social media, US sport and international politics, 156–158 in sport, 148–150 sport and social media and, 148 white athletes, 153–155 Positive aspects’, 166 Positive psychological implications of Twitter, 229 Post-partum big story, 98–100 Postfeminism, 18 “Postfeminist biopedagogies”, 35 Power of abuser, 195–196 Predictive analytic models, 206 Premier League, 74–75 Premier League, 111 Premodern sport, 207 “Pro-gay language”, 54 Professional Footballers’ Association (PFA), 76–77 Professionals, 207 PSR, 190 Psycho-medical studies, 36 Qualitative content analysis approach, 77 Qualitative methods, 199 Quantification, 209 Quantified Self, 212 Quantitative measurement of athletic performance, 207 Quantitative performance assessment, 207 Race, 225, 230 Racial abuse, 230–231 Racial-ethnic minority student-athletes experience, 227 Racism, 68 structural racism, 70–71 systemic racism, 70–71 “Racist-sexist matrix”, 230 ‘Real-world’ experiences, 187 Recontextualisation, 77 ‘Reverse racism’, 79, 81 Rooney Rule, 69, 71–73 and English football, 73–74 Runner’s World magazine, 92–93 Safeguarding of athletes, 198 ‘Screen grabbing’, 96–97 Secrecy of abuser, 195–196 Self-categorization, 109 Self-efficacy, 229 ‘Self-presentation’, 188 Self-representation, 188–189 Sexual abuse, 230 Sexual minorities, 128 Sexual orientation, 230 Sexualities apex of homophobia, 130–131 English football organizations, 135 social media practices, 133–135 sport, masculinitites, and, 128–135 sport as inclusive space, 131–133 Smugness, 112 Social change for mental health and well-being, 232–234 Social comparison theory, 4, 109 Social identity theory, 109 Social justice, 18–20 Social media, 1–2, 156, 158, 186, 189, 224 addiction, 224–225 athlete mental health and well-being and, 228–229 and mental health and wellbeing, 227–228 traditional media and sport nexus exists in, 226 Social media, 187 activist politics and visibilities, 33 body image, abuse, and navigating risk, 35–38 discrimination on, 128 football fandom and, 74–76 materialist theory, 38–39 for mental health and well-being, 232–234 methods for women’s sporting, 38 national identification in, 112–114 national identity, 111–112 nationalism and, 150–152 by physically active women, 31–38 politics and ethics, 39–40 politics and sport and, 148 recreational sport, fitness, and community, 34–35 by sportswomen, 31–38 for women, 30 Social reproduction, 70 Socio-cultural narratives, 90 Sociocultural studies, 171 Socioeconomic status, 225 Sociological approach, 206–208, 210–211, 225–226 questions needing further investigation, 213–217 to sport media, 11–12 work done from sociological approach in sport context, 211–213 Sociological attributes of mental health, 226 Sociological research, 194–195 Sociologists, 209 Sociology informs nationalism, 108–110 Sport, 1, 146, 209 analytics, 206–207 anxiety, 228–229 digital technology and, 187–188 as inclusive space, 131–133 law, 194 management, 194 masculinity and, 50–53 and motherhood in cultural context, 91–92 national identification in, 112–114 nationalism and, 150–152 politics in, 148–150 and sexualities, 128–135 social media and politics and, 148 studies scholars, 211–212 ‘Sport ethic’, 195 Sport media, 12–15 athletes, fans, and digital communities, 15–18 digital media, 18–20 digital platforms, 12–15 directions in sociological approaches, 20–22 organisations, 187, 198 social justice, 18–20 sociological approaches to, 11–12 sociological scholarship, 10–11 weight room issue, 10 Sports People’s Think Tank (SPTT), 73 Sportswomen, 230 and motherhood, 93–94 self-representation by, 31–33 social media by, 31–38 Stigma, 232 Stigmatization of mental health, 226, 233–234 Strava’, 174 Stressors, 227 Structural racism, 68, 70–71 Student athletes, 228–229 “Subversive form of politics”, 17 Super mum’, 90 Surveillance technologies, 166 and athlete retirement, 176–177 behavioural ‘nudges’, 178–179 in field/team, 170–171 implications for athlete, 172–174 implications for coach, 171–172, 174–175 implications of, 167–168 in individual sports, 172 ‘more’ technology, 177–178 sociocultural research, 169–170 sociology of sport and investigating, 168–169 touchstone topics for continued analysis, 175–176 Surveillance technology, 4–5 Sydney Olympic Games, 92–93 Symbolic communication, 209 Systemic racism, 68, 70–71 Techno-athleticism, 173 Techno-utopianism, 210 Technological advancements, 187 Third wave feminist politics, 17–18 Traditional media, 226 ‘Transformative potential’, 189 Trolling, 229 Twitter, 187–188, 229 Uniqueness of fingerprint, 210 United Kingdom (UK), 68 United Stand, The , 120 United States (US), 68 US sport and international politics, 156–158 User-generated content (UGC), 34, 186 “Velocity dashboards”, 216 Video games, 1 Violence, 191 Virtual environment, 186, 194 dark side of, 189–192 process of consuming and engaging in, 186 Virtual fan violence, 190 Virtual interactions, 190–191 Virtual maltreatment, 37, 229–230 and athlete mental health and well-being, 229–232 future research directions, 234–235 Virtual reality, 186 Virtual violence, 191 targeting women athletes, 191–192 Virtual worlds, 186 “Vote Warnock” shirts, 156 Web 2.0, 186, 189–190 Well-being athlete mental health and, 226–227 of elite athletes, 224 social media and, 227–229 virtual maltreatment and athlete mental health and, 229–232 White racial frame, 71 Williams, Serena, 230–231 Wired Magazine , 208 Women athletes, 189, 191–192 in sport, 225 Women Talk Sports, 16 Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA), 4, 132, 146–147 players impacting senate seat, 155–156 Women’s Super League (WSL), 135 ‘Workhorse’ positions, 71–72 ‘Working mum and new mumtrepeneur’ small story, 101–102 Younger athletes, 228–229 mental health of, 227 Book Chapters Prelims Introduction Social Media, Digital Technology, and Sport Media Critical Encounters with Social Media in Women's Sport and Physical Culture Social Media, Digital Technology, and Masculinity in Sport Investigating Online Fan Responses to the Rooney Rule in English Football Narrative Inquiry: A Cultural Approach for Understanding Big and Small Stories of Motherhood and Sport on Instagram Social Media, Digital Technology, and National Identity in Sport Social Media, Digital Technology, and Sexuality in Sport Social Media and Politics in Sport Sport and Surveillance Technologies Social Media, Digital Technology and Athlete Abuse Quantification, Big Data, and Biometrics in Sport Social Media and Athlete Mental Health and Well-Being Index

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