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Featured researches published by Clifton Evers.


Social & Cultural Geography | 2009

‘The Point’: surfing, geography and a sensual life of men and masculinity on the Gold Coast, Australia

Clifton Evers

The beach has long been a privileged site in Australian culture, and surfers have become icons of it. These men are often referred to as straight as steel, strong as granite, austere and inviolate. Drawing on over three decades worth of surfing I unpack this hegemonic understanding of men who surf, and reveal in its place the importance of feelings and bodies to their lives. Through an analysis of going surfing I articulate the role feelings and bodies play in how men belong, how they bond with their ‘turf’, come to understand themselves as masculine, and how they learn to do masculinity.


Journal of Sport & Social Issues | 2006

How to Surf

Clifton Evers

This article explores the sensual world of men who surf. Self-reflexive and fictocritical in tone, it meditates on how many studies of masculinity tend to separate the social and bodily. The article maps a way to pull bodies and feelings back into such studies in a productive manner. Affect theory is used to evidence how doing masculinity is built on feelings and intimacy. In turn, the article grounds gender in the activities of everyday life that function to bring together the sociological, psychological, and biological. Furthermore, the article argues that by researching through bodies, it is possible to complicate traditional tropes of masculinity that position it as stable and unemotional. Most important, the researchers body is shown to be integral to any imagination of how the surfing culture works.


Sex Education | 2011

Playing by the rules : researching, teaching and learning sexual ethics with young men in the Australian National Rugby League

Kath Albury; Moira Carmody; Clifton Evers; Catharine Lumby

In 2004, the Australian National Rugby League (NRL) commissioned the Playing By The Rules research project in response to allegations of sexual assault by members of a professional rugby league team. This article offers an overview of the theoretical and methodological approaches adopted by the team, and the subsequent workplace education programmes designed to promote ethical sexual behaviour and attitudes within NRL culture. The researchers reflect on contemporary thinking in the relatively new field of violence prevention education aimed at young men, and consider new critical approaches to the intersection of masculinities and sexual learning.


Sport in Society | 2018

The gendered emotional labor of male professional ‘freesurfers’ digital media work

Clifton Evers

Abstract Male professional ‘freesurfers’ are paid to live an aspirational lifestyle and communicate this through their digital media work. In this article I argue that a ‘stoke imperative’ championed by the surf industry necessitates emotional labour. Stoke is surf vernacular for a clustering of feeling thrilled, joyful, pleased, happy, optimistic, excited and satisfied. The surf industry manufactures and commodifies stoke to profit from it. Emotional labour is often assumed to be what women are ‘naturally’ predisposed to and ‘better at’. It is found that male professional freesurfers are competent at employing strategies for doing emotional labour when doing digital media work, such as micro-celebrity. However, this involves negotiating expectations, traits, and values of masculinity. It is also found that digital media technologies direct a professional sport ‘technosoma’ that networks emotional labour for profit. The article extends a small body of literature on how emotional labour is practised by men in sport.


Visuality, Emotions and Minority Culture: Feeling Ethnic | 2017

Hegemonic Pan-Ethnic White Australian Masculinity: Feeling Masculine During Mediated-Assemblages

Clifton Evers

Globalization have brought transformations to conditions of possibility—historical, social, material, economic, spatial, political, and cultural—at various scales: local, regional, national, and international. Fortunati et al. (2012) have identified that especially for new migrants information and communication technologies now play an important role in negotiating the changes as they migrate and resettle.


Cultural studies review | 2013

Men Who Surf

Clifton Evers


Reproductive Health Matters | 2013

'It Would be Weird to Have That on Facebook': Young People’s Use of Social Media and the Risk of Sharing Sexual Health Information

Paul Byron; Kath Albury; Clifton Evers


International Journal of Communication | 2013

Young People, Social Media, Social Network Sites and Sexual Health Communication in Australia: "This is Funny, You Should Watch It"

Clifton Evers; Kath Albury; Paul Byron; Kate Crawford


Emotion, Space and Society | 2010

Intimacy, sport and young refugee men

Clifton Evers


BMC Public Health | 2010

Social cohesion through football: a quasi-experimental mixed methods design to evaluate a complex health promotion program

Sally Nathan; Anne W. Bunde-Birouste; Clifton Evers; Lynn Kemp; Julie MacKenzie; Robert Henley

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Kath Albury

University of New South Wales

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Paul Byron

University of New South Wales

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Julie MacKenzie

University of New South Wales

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Sally Nathan

University of New South Wales

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Andrew Gorman-Murray

University of Western Sydney

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Catharine Lumby

University of New South Wales

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