Description

Book Synopsis
An innovative exploration of the history and culture of surfing that recasts wave-riding as a complex cultural practice and reclaims the forgotten roles that women, indigenous peoples, and peoples of color have played in the its evolution.

Trade Review
"Editors Hough-Snee and Eastman have curated 18 essays that go above and below the waves to explore the deeper social, cultural, and political meaning of surfing. Recommended. All readers." -- R. W. Roberts * Choice *
"An exciting and important contribution to a field that is still relatively new to academics. . . . The book is an ambitious and innovative one that lays valuable groundwork for a field with a promising future. Beyond surf-oriented scholars, it will be of interest to scholars in the wider fields of sport history, cultural studies, ethnic studies, gender studies, geography, and political economy; and to a nonacademic readership that includes surfers and surf enthusiasts." -- Elizabeth E. Sine * Journal of Sport History *
"While [The Critical Surf Studies Reader] is underpinned by a rich diversity, essays collected here all find a certain degree of unity through a shared commitment to critical analysis and reflexivity that marks each as a serious intellectual engagement with the world of surfing. . . . High-quality scholarship and insightful critical analysis make this a worthy addition to other works in the field of Indigenous studies." -- Barry Judd * Native American and Indigenous Studies *
"Many of the chapters are written with a historical approach to studying surfing, making this book highly relevant for sport historians interested in surfing and other lifestyle/action sports. A well-written and recommended read for surfing history enthusiasts!" -- Anne Tjønndal * International Journal of the History of Sport *
"The Critical Surf Studies Reader is a thought-provoking book that will make important contributions to numerous fields including sociology of sport, sociology of action sports, sport for development and peace, cultural studies, media studies, leisure and tourism studies, critical race studies, and settler colonial studies. . . . [T]his collection of work should have a wide appeal within and beyond academia, and I can imagine it being taken up by those surfers who are critically engaged with the activity that defines such a part of their identity and communities." -- Rebecca Olive * Sociology of Sport Journal *
"What makes this book especially interesting is that even though it is of course an anthology, the strengths of the individual texts come through when consuming the collection holistically. ... All of the texts provide excellent insights and, taken together, produce a vivid image of the current state of surfing in its various facets." -- Jeeshan Gazi * National Identities *

Table of Contents
List of Abbreviations ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction / Dexter Zavalza Hough-Snee and Alexander Sotelo Eastman 1
Part I. Coloniality and Decolonization
1. On a Mission: Hiram Bingham and the Rhetoric of Urgency / Patrick Moser 29
2. A World Apart: Pleasure, Rebellion, and the Politics of Surf Tourism / Scott Laderman 47
3. Kai Ea: Rising Waves of National and Ethnic Hawaiian Identities / Isaiah Helekunihi Walker 62
4. Consolidation, Creativity, and (de)Colonization in the State of Modern Surfing / Dexter Zavalza Hough-Snee and Alexander Sotelo Eastman 84
5. Decolonizing Sustainable Surf Tourism / Tara Ruttenberg and Peter Brosius 109
Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
6. Surfing beyond Racial and Colonial Imperatives in Early Modern Atlantic Africa and Oceania / Kevin Dawson 135
7. Pushing under the Whitewash: Revisiting the Making of South Africa's Surfing Sixties / Glen Thompson 155
8. Space Invaders in Surfing's White Tribe: Exploring Surfing, Race, and Identity / Belinda Wheaton 177
9. Indigenous Surfing: Pedagogy, Pleasure, and Decolonial Practice / Colleen McGloin 196
10. Appropriating Surfing and the Politics of Indigenous Authenticity / Dina Gilio-Whitaker 214
Part III. Feminist Critical Geography
11. Surfeminism, Critical Regionalism, and Public Scholarship / Krista Comer 235
12. Desexing Surfing? Pedagogies of Possibility / lisahunter 263
13. "My Mother Is a Fish": From Stealth Feminism to Surfeminism / Cori Schumacher 284
Part IV. Capitalism, Economics, and the Commodification of Surf Culture
14. Free Ride: The Food Stamp Surfer, American Counterculture, and the Refusal of Work / Kristin Lawler 305
15. The Political Economy of Surfing Culture: Production, Profit, and Representation / Douglas Booth 318
16. Soulful and Precarious: The Working Experiences of Surfboard Makers / Andrew Warren and Chris Gibson 342
17. Branded Primitives / Robin Canniford 365
18. Surfing and Contemporary China / Clifton Evers 386
Bibliography 403
Contributors 443
Index 449

The Critical Surf Studies Reader

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A Hardback by Dexter Zavalza Hough-Snee, Alexander Sotelo Eastman

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    View other formats and editions of The Critical Surf Studies Reader by Dexter Zavalza Hough-Snee

    Publisher: Duke University Press
    Publication Date: 14/09/2017
    ISBN13: 9780822369578, 978-0822369578
    ISBN10: 0822369575

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    An innovative exploration of the history and culture of surfing that recasts wave-riding as a complex cultural practice and reclaims the forgotten roles that women, indigenous peoples, and peoples of color have played in the its evolution.

    Trade Review
    "Editors Hough-Snee and Eastman have curated 18 essays that go above and below the waves to explore the deeper social, cultural, and political meaning of surfing. Recommended. All readers." -- R. W. Roberts * Choice *
    "An exciting and important contribution to a field that is still relatively new to academics. . . . The book is an ambitious and innovative one that lays valuable groundwork for a field with a promising future. Beyond surf-oriented scholars, it will be of interest to scholars in the wider fields of sport history, cultural studies, ethnic studies, gender studies, geography, and political economy; and to a nonacademic readership that includes surfers and surf enthusiasts." -- Elizabeth E. Sine * Journal of Sport History *
    "While [The Critical Surf Studies Reader] is underpinned by a rich diversity, essays collected here all find a certain degree of unity through a shared commitment to critical analysis and reflexivity that marks each as a serious intellectual engagement with the world of surfing. . . . High-quality scholarship and insightful critical analysis make this a worthy addition to other works in the field of Indigenous studies." -- Barry Judd * Native American and Indigenous Studies *
    "Many of the chapters are written with a historical approach to studying surfing, making this book highly relevant for sport historians interested in surfing and other lifestyle/action sports. A well-written and recommended read for surfing history enthusiasts!" -- Anne Tjønndal * International Journal of the History of Sport *
    "The Critical Surf Studies Reader is a thought-provoking book that will make important contributions to numerous fields including sociology of sport, sociology of action sports, sport for development and peace, cultural studies, media studies, leisure and tourism studies, critical race studies, and settler colonial studies. . . . [T]his collection of work should have a wide appeal within and beyond academia, and I can imagine it being taken up by those surfers who are critically engaged with the activity that defines such a part of their identity and communities." -- Rebecca Olive * Sociology of Sport Journal *
    "What makes this book especially interesting is that even though it is of course an anthology, the strengths of the individual texts come through when consuming the collection holistically. ... All of the texts provide excellent insights and, taken together, produce a vivid image of the current state of surfing in its various facets." -- Jeeshan Gazi * National Identities *

    Table of Contents
    List of Abbreviations ix
    Acknowledgments xi
    Introduction / Dexter Zavalza Hough-Snee and Alexander Sotelo Eastman 1
    Part I. Coloniality and Decolonization
    1. On a Mission: Hiram Bingham and the Rhetoric of Urgency / Patrick Moser 29
    2. A World Apart: Pleasure, Rebellion, and the Politics of Surf Tourism / Scott Laderman 47
    3. Kai Ea: Rising Waves of National and Ethnic Hawaiian Identities / Isaiah Helekunihi Walker 62
    4. Consolidation, Creativity, and (de)Colonization in the State of Modern Surfing / Dexter Zavalza Hough-Snee and Alexander Sotelo Eastman 84
    5. Decolonizing Sustainable Surf Tourism / Tara Ruttenberg and Peter Brosius 109
    Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
    6. Surfing beyond Racial and Colonial Imperatives in Early Modern Atlantic Africa and Oceania / Kevin Dawson 135
    7. Pushing under the Whitewash: Revisiting the Making of South Africa's Surfing Sixties / Glen Thompson 155
    8. Space Invaders in Surfing's White Tribe: Exploring Surfing, Race, and Identity / Belinda Wheaton 177
    9. Indigenous Surfing: Pedagogy, Pleasure, and Decolonial Practice / Colleen McGloin 196
    10. Appropriating Surfing and the Politics of Indigenous Authenticity / Dina Gilio-Whitaker 214
    Part III. Feminist Critical Geography
    11. Surfeminism, Critical Regionalism, and Public Scholarship / Krista Comer 235
    12. Desexing Surfing? Pedagogies of Possibility / lisahunter 263
    13. "My Mother Is a Fish": From Stealth Feminism to Surfeminism / Cori Schumacher 284
    Part IV. Capitalism, Economics, and the Commodification of Surf Culture
    14. Free Ride: The Food Stamp Surfer, American Counterculture, and the Refusal of Work / Kristin Lawler 305
    15. The Political Economy of Surfing Culture: Production, Profit, and Representation / Douglas Booth 318
    16. Soulful and Precarious: The Working Experiences of Surfboard Makers / Andrew Warren and Chris Gibson 342
    17. Branded Primitives / Robin Canniford 365
    18. Surfing and Contemporary China / Clifton Evers 386
    Bibliography 403
    Contributors 443
    Index 449

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