Overview
Background
Rebecca Olive joined the School of Human Movement and Nutrition Sciences in 2017. Her work about lifestyle and nature sports contributes to critical cultural, social and historical teaching and research relating to sport, physical cultures, bodies, and health. Rebecca publishes in journals and books across Cultural Studies, Gender Studies, Sport Sociology, and Sport History, and has co-edited a book with Holly Thorpe, Women in Action Sport Cultures: Identity, Politics and Experience (2016).
In 2019, she was awarded a DECRA for her project baout human-ocean health, 'Understanding ecological sensibilities in recreational lifestyle sports'. This project explores practices and cultures of ocean swimming and surfing to understand intersections human and environmental health. The project uses ethnographic methods (fieldwork and interviews) to make sense of ocean-swimmers’ and surfers' relationships to sharks, plastics, and localism at a range of urban and regional beaches. You can read more about this work on her Moving Oceans website.
Rebecca also continues focus on issues of equity and diversity and action/lifestyle sports and cultures, in particular women's experiences. Taking a feminist cultural studies approach to theories of power, ethics and pedagogy, she is interested in how we influence cultural change in everyday lived physical cultures towards more inclusive access and participation. Current projects include:
- Bluespaces and health
- Nature sports
- Women in sport, physical activity and leisure practices
- Self-representation on social media – elite athletes, recreational sports and fitness cultures
- Feminist research methods
Availability
- Dr Rebecca Olive is:
- Available for supervision
- Media expert
Qualifications
- Bachelor of Arts, University of Sydney
- Bachelor (Honours) of Arts, Southern Cross University
- Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland
Research interests
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Bluespaces and human-ocean health
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Women, gender and recreational lifestyle sports
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Localism and settler-colonial politics in sport
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Sport, health and social media
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Feminist ethnographic research methods
Research impacts
Rebecca's research engages with questions of power, ethics, and pedagogy in everyday life including online, and is driven by a commitment to community engagement. She is interested in how cultural change happens and ensure research intersects with teaching, policy, media, and community. As well as scholarly publications, Rebecca is committed to connecting teaching and research, and has developed a presence in cultural media and communities relevant to her research in coastal cultures, recreational lifestyle sports, social media, and ethnographic methods. Rebecca has had stories and interviews published with ABC news and radio, is a regular contributor to surf media and festivals, and writes her blog, Making Friends With the Neighbours.
Since 2018, Rebecca has been a Research Fellow with AustLit, compiling data sets about 'swimming wild' and surfing in Australian literature. These ongoing projects are producing publicly available archives of swimming and surfing sources, as well as a list of relevant scholarship. You can explore the project and resources via the AustLit site.
Recent conference organisation:
- Co-convener, Moving Futures: Researching bodies and health in the 21st century, Centre for Sport and Society, The University of Queensland, 14 November 2017
- Co-organiser, Technicity. Temporality. Embodiment. Somatechnics conference, Byron Bay, Australia, 1-3 December 2016
- Co-convener, Surfing social: Challenging surfer identities and spaces, Raglan, NZ, 10-12 Feb 2016
- Convener, The Future of Cycling: Challenges and Possibilities, Cambridge, NZ, October 1-2 2015
- Convener, The University of Waikato Gender Research Network, 2015
- Organising committee for The University of Waikato, Women in Leadership Day, 2015
Works
Search Professor Rebecca Olive’s works on UQ eSpace
2009
Conference Publication
Reflexitivity: Locating myself in research
Olive, Rebecca (2009). Reflexitivity: Locating myself in research. Sporting Traditions XVII. The Cultural Paradigm: Reinvigorating Sport History?, Wellington, New Zealand, 30 June - 3 July, 2009. New Zealand: Routledge.
Funding
Past funding
Supervision
Availability
- Dr Rebecca Olive is:
- Available for supervision
Looking for a supervisor? Read our advice on how to choose a supervisor.
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Escaping in changing coastal environments: Women¿s experiences of social yacht racing in Australia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Murray Phillips
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Doctor Philosophy
Exploring the role of community dance on wellbeing in Australian culture
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Leigh Sperka
Completed supervision
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2025
Doctor Philosophy
Sports betting as an everyday practice
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Murray Phillips, Professor Nicholas Carah
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2025
Doctor Philosophy
Experiencing participation in-the-moment: The insightfulness of nonverbal interactions of children during physical activity (The Unsaid Story)
Associate Advisor
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2021
Doctor Philosophy
Creativity, practices, and place: The (re)creation of a transnational subculture
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Diana Young
Media
Enquiries
Contact Dr Rebecca Olive directly for media enquiries about:
- action and lifestyle sports
- nature sports
- ocean swimming
- sport and social media
- surfing
- swimming
- women and sport
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