Category Archives: Research Journals

Scholarly Sports Studies Journals

Below is a still partial but useful list of scholarly journals that focus specifically on the study of sports. I have indicated the name of the current publisher, if applicable, and provide the link that sends you directly to the journal’s website. I also indicate the current extent of Trinity’s subscription, where applicable. In the case of journals with free access through the LA84 Foundation, the link for those journals sends you directly to the search page at the LA84 Foundation Digital Archive.

NOTE: This list is a work-in-progress that will be updated as the information changes or new journals are added.

  • Communication and Sport  (Sage) – Trinity has a full subscription since it began publication in early 2013
  • International Journal of the History of Sport  (Taylor & Francis) – Trinity’s subscription is currently from April 1997 to the present. I have requested that the library expands its subscription to the entire run of this, perhaps the most important journal in the field of sports history. In the meantime, if you find articles published before 1997, you can request copies via Inter-Library Loan using the ILLIAD System.International Journal of the History of Sport cover
  • International Review for the Sociology of Sport  (Sage) – Trinity has a full subscription available
  • International Sports Studies  –– Free online access for 1999 to 2004 at the LA84 Foundation Digital Archive.
  • Journal of Olympic History –– Free online access for 1992 to 2004 at the LA84 Foundation Digital Archive.
  • Journal of the Philosophy of Sport:  (1) Free Online Access for 1974 to 1976 ONLY at the LA84 Foundation Digital Archive;  (2) Printed Journal Issues available at the Trinity Library: v.1 (1974) – v.17 (1990); v.19 (1992) – v.37:no.2(2010);  v.38:no.2 (2011) – Use the Library Catalog Call Number GV706 .J68 to find the printed issues in the stacks or ask for help at the Circulation Desk; (3) Online access through Trinity Library’s Taylor & Francis subscription, which coversonly since 1997 is available here. ––  If you find articles published before 1997 and which are not available either through the LA84 Foundation or in Trinity’s Printed Journals Collection, you can still request copies via Inter-Library Loan using the ILLIAD System.International Review for the Sociology of Sport cover
  • Journal of Sport History:  (1) Free Online Access for 1974 to 2009 at the LA84 Foundation Digital Archive;  (2) Trinity’s Library provides online access available for all issues published since 2010 via Project Muse.
  • Journal of Sport & Social Issues   (Sage) – Trinity’s Library provides access to the full subscription since 1977.
  • Sociology of Sport Journal  (Human Kinetics) – Trinity’s Library provides access to the full subscription since 1984
  • Soccer and Society  (Taylor and Francis) – Trinity’s Library provides access to the full subscription since it began publishing in 2000.Soccer in Society journal cover
  • Sport in History (originally The Sports Historian, 1982 – 2002) –– (Taylor and Francis) –  Trinity’s Library is subscribed ONLY to issues published since Vol. 23 (2003). However, if you search the journal’s website and find potentially useful articles published before 2003, you can still request copies via Inter-Library Loan using the ILLIAD System.
  • Sports in Society   (Taylor & Francis) – Trinity provides online access for issues published since vol. 7 (2004) but the journal began publishing in 1998. If you search the journal’s website and find potentially useful articles published before 2003, you can still request copies via Inter-Library Loan using the ILLIAD System.Sport History Review journal cover
  • Sports History Review   (Human Kinetics) – Published since 1970. ––  Unfortunately, Trinity does NOT have a library subscription. I have requested that the library subscribes to the entire run of the journal since it began publishing in 1970, or at least to volumes published since 1990. I will update this item if this situation changes. In the meantime, you can search for articles at the publisher’s website and request copies via Inter-Library Loan using the ILLIAD system.

 

New Research Journal: “Communication & Sport”

Cover of the Inaugural Issue of the Journal "Communication & Sport"The editorial house Sage has just begun publishing a new journal titled Communication & Sport that covers one of the most important topics in sports studies. Simply put, the development of modern sports would not have been possible without the role played by newspapers, magazines, radio, television and now online communications media.

The first issue of the journal consists of seventeen essays introducing several themes in the study of sports from the perspective of media studies.

Below are the titles of a few articles that I strongly recommend because they cover some of the major issues that we will study in this seminar.

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David Rowe, “Reflections on Communication and Sport: On Nation and Globalization,” Communication & Sport, 1:1-2 (2013): 18-29.

Abstract: In this essay, David Rowe reflects on how the nexus of sport and communication has affected national and global sensibilities. Sport contests take place at particular times in specific places, usually in a stadium setting, but not all who desire to watch can be present in the stadium. Without mediated communication, the vast edifice of contemporary sport would have remained largely localized, segmented activities. Progressively under modernity, print media could discuss and interpret sport for those who were far distant; electronic media brought the sights and sounds of the unique event to them in real time, and much else besides; and now online media enable people all over the world to communicate with each other about sport. Communication and sport are, then, demonstrably indissoluble and of intrinsic importance as a focus of sociocultural organization, activity, identity, and affect as well as of capital accumulation. Mediated sport is thereby carried into virtually every other sociocultural domain. Understanding the dynamics of communication and sport is, therefore, an essential capability for anyone who wishes to function as an engaged, knowledgeable citizen of a sport-saturated world that they may not have made but must nonetheless inhabit.

• • • • • •

Michael Real, “Reflections on Communication and Sport: On Spectacle and Mega-Events,” Communication & Sport, 1:1-2 (2013): 30-42.

Abstract: In this essay, Michael Real reflects on why communication about sport is of cultural importance and worthy of critical study. The early part of the essay reflects on challenges faced in the development of the study of communication and sport and the author‚’s involvement in that development. The author reflects on his choice to focus on spectacle and mega-events, such as media treatment of the Super Bowl and the Olympic Games. The essay traces significant influences and ‘schools’ of critical approaches to communication and sport, from small beginnings in the 1970s through rapid expansion of topics and methods in the 1980s and since. Key historic contributions that have influenced research on communication and sport are examined along with conflicts about how to best approach this subject. The focus section of the essay assesses a number of broad theoretical lenses that have value in studying mediated sport‚’s mega-events as spectacle. Considered here [is an] . . . approach [developed by anthropologist Clifford Geertz for] ritual analysis, [French philosopher Guy] Debord‚’s [concept of the] society of the spectacle, and [sociologist Maurice] Roche‚’s theory of mega-events. The essay closes with comment on the road ahead for scholarly research on communication and sport.

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David L. Andrews, “Reflections on Communication and Sport: On Celebrity and Race,” Communication & Sport, 1:1-2 (2013): 151-63.

Abstract: In this essay, David Andrews examines the intriguing nexus of celebrity and race in the context of mediated sport. As a suggestive, rather than comprehensive examination of the study of sport, celebrity, and race, the treatment attempts to illuminate the derivation, complexities, and absences within this field of intellectual inquiry. After a brief discussion of why the relationship between communication and sport matters in social and cultural terms, insight is given to the author‚’s engagement with celebrity- and race-focused research. This is followed by a brief overview of the celebrity and race research, highlighting its genesis, major themes, and foci. Paying particular attention to the U.S.-based studies, this discussion provides a rationale for the intensification of sport, celebrity, and race research in the late 1980s and early 1990s, draws attention to studies representative of the major strands of inquiry, and highlights heretofore understudied areas. Finally, the prospects and directions for further inquiry on the nexus of celebrity and race in the context of mediated sport are briefly considered.

• • • • • •

Arthur A. Raney, “Reflections on Communication and Sport: On Enjoyment and Disposition,” Communication & Sport, 1:1-2 (2013): 164-75.

Abstract: In this essay, Arthur Raney reflects on how decades of media scholarship have explored the importance of affective dispositions toward teams and contest outcomes to viewer enjoyment of live televised sport events. The introduction to the essay focuses on personal experiences that shaped his interests in understanding how spectator responses to mediated sport were culturally and psychologically significant. Raney reflects on his studies and collaboration with many of the scholars who were foundational in understanding how the role of affective disposition and enjoyment relates to sport media consumption. Throughout this essay, key themes emerging from empirical studies examining sports media enjoyment are identified. Further consideration is given to how new media technologies might impact sports enjoyment in the future.