Joy as a Mode of Resistance: An examination of Black Girl Hockey Club’s Ongoing Quest for Racial Justice

dc.contributor.advisorMacNeill, Margaret
dc.contributor.authorRazack, Sabrina Alisha
dc.contributor.departmentKinesiology and Physical Education
dc.date2022-11
dc.date.accepted2022-11
dc.date.accessioned2022-11-11T16:12:55Z
dc.date.available2022-11-11T16:12:55Z
dc.date.convocation2022-11
dc.date.issued2022-11
dc.description.abstractThrough a case study of the Black Girl Hockey Club (BGHC) founded by Renee Hess, this doctoral research project investigates how an online sports network operates as a community of resistance to racism, uniting political action with the joy of sport. Hess initially established media sites including a Twitter handle, ‘@Blackgirlhockey’ as a fan account, to attract Black women who enjoyed watching and engaging with hockey cultures. The COVID 19 pandemic and the 2020 global racial uprisings transformed the Black Girl Hockey Club into a site for hockey fandom while simultaneously influencing hockey environments and users of the site to address racism. This dissertation uses mixed-methods to employ an in-depth case study of the BGHC, a not-for-profit organization and digital network with over 30K Twitter followers. The thesis integrates theoretical and methodological frameworks of critical media studies, Black feminist theory, critical race theory, anti-racism, and social movements. The thesis demonstrates that cyber networks can enable participants to initiate social change within their own communities. The effectiveness of hashtag feminist sports activism was demonstrated through an analysis of BGHC’s #getuncomfortable campaign. Various outcomes related to involvement with Black Girl Hockey Club were explored including the blurring of on and offline engagement and the development of political consciousness among users of the site. Research participants acquired intellectual empathy, humility and a collective agency related to anti-racism movements. The Black Girl Hockey Club community clearly developed ‘networks of hope’ that produced visible cracks to the dominant social order (in hockey cultures). Another measured outcome was an increase of social capital, individual and collective agency achieved through active involvement with Black Girl Hockey Club. The research illuminates the effective functionality of feminist cyber networks and supports the plausibility and advancement of anti-racism efforts in hockey cultures both virtually and offline. This thesis broadens sport and social movement literature by exploring how the pleasures associated with sport – in this case the love of hockey—became linked to anti-racist activism in an online community. It reveals how an affective mode, joy, shapes a social movement.
dc.description.degreePh.D.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/124935
dc.subjectanti-racism
dc.subjectfeminism
dc.subjectjustice
dc.subjectrace
dc.subjectsocial media
dc.subjectsport
dc.subject.classification0534
dc.titleJoy as a Mode of Resistance: An examination of Black Girl Hockey Club’s Ongoing Quest for Racial Justice
dc.typeThesis

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