The Gender and Sexuality Collection is a valuable resource for university librarians, researchers, and teaching staff. This collection delves into themes such as domesticity, education, work, sexuality, representation, religion, mental health, activism and motherhood. By surveying gender identity and sexuality from diverse perspectives, it raises critical questions about gender roles, feminist theory and heteronormativity. Covering a broad historical range from the medieval period to the present day, this collection is indispensable for those engaged in gender and sexuality studies.


Key series
Gender in History
Rethinking Art’s Histories
Studies in Imperialism
Theory for a Global Age
Women, Theatre and Performance

 

Collection year Titles
2025 titles 7
2023/4 titles 12
2004-2022 titles 89
Total collection 128
Keywords
Domesticity
Education
Work
Nature
Sexuality
Heteronormativity
Representation
Religion
Global South
Mental health
Motherhood
Gender roles
Activism
Feminism
Beauty
Thema subject categories
Colonialism and imperialism
History
Economics
Politics and government
The Arts
Feminism and feminist theory
Film history, theory or criticism
Gender studies, gender groups
History of religion
LGBTQ+ Studies / topics

SDG coverage

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Gender and sexuality collection

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Mark Doidge
,
Radosław Kossakowski
, and
Svenja Mintert

Football fandom is a regular, ritualistic performance that takes place every weekend over the course of a season. These performances are recounted in conversation, social media and traditional media throughout the week. The performances help locate the individual within a broader collective, but also structure their interactions with others. Through the collective ritual of fandom, the ultras elevate themselves into a state of flow that brings the gathering of individual fans into one collective working in unison.

in Ultras
Mark Doidge
,
Radosław Kossakowski
, and
Svenja Mintert

Football studies are replete with analyses of hooliganism. Yet ultras are distinct from hooligans. The ‘English style’ of hooliganism has influenced ultras through greater match attendance at international tournaments. Yet violent incidents are still relatively rare. Increasingly, violence is symbolic and displayed in the overtly masculine choreographies and chants of the ultras. The gendered dimension of ultras fandom remains dominant as masculinity underpins much of the symbolic violence in the ultras’ performance.

in Ultras