All Stories

  1. Aboriginality, Racial Discourse and Football Media in 20th-century Queensland
  2. The View from the Office, the View from the Field: Sport in Queensland Aboriginal Reserves
  3. Sisterhood, pleasure and marching: Indigenous women and leisure
  4. A Forgotten Picture: Race, Photographs and Cathy Freeman at the Northcote Koori Mural
  5. ‘Swimming instruction trust of America’: the Cavill family, borderlands and decentring Australia sport history
  6. 'Where Cassius Clay Ends, Muhammad Ali Begins”: Sportspeople, Political Activism, and Methodology.’
  7. Crossing Lines: Sport History, Transformative Narratives, and Aboriginal Australia
  8. Australia's Women Surfers: History, Methodology and the Digital Humanities
  9. Blown out of the Water: The 1933 New Caledonian water polo visit to Australia and demise of a racial stereotype
  10. Indigenous sport and heritage: Cherbourg's Ration Shed Museum
  11. Broadening Readings of Sport Monuments: The Arthur Baynes Memorial Obelisk
  12. Wicked Wikipedia? Communities of Practice, the Production of Knowledge and Australian Sport History
  13. Clipped histories: representing the Cavill family of swimmers in historical feature articles
  14. ‘Lively little visitors’ and ‘peaceful ambassadors’: reading Japanese sporting tours through the Australian press – 1926 to 1935
  15. Swimming Her Own Course: Agency in the Professional Swimming Career of Alice Cavill
  16. The Surfing Tommy Tanna
  17. ReadingSalute: Filmic Representations of Sports History
  18. History of surfing
  19. Enveloping the Past: Sport Stamps, Visuality and Museums
  20. Filmic Sports History: Dawn Fraser, Swimming and Australian National Identity
  21. Forgetting Charlie and Tums Cavill: social memory and Australian swimming history1
  22. ‘Modest Monuments’?
  23. Reflecting materiality: reading sport history through the lens
  24. Mixing Race The Kong Sing Brothers and Australian Sport
  25. ‘Look at that kid crawling’: Race, myth and the ‘crawl’ stroke
  26. ‘Putting up your Dukes’: Statues social memory and Duke Paoa Kahanamoku
  27. ‘The bloke with a stroke’