
Overview
Background
Stephen Townsend is a lecturer in sport sociocultural studies with the School of Human Movement and Nutrition Sciences. Stephen joined HMNS in 2019 after completing his PhD in Sport History. His current research examines social, cultural, and historical aspects of sports concussion.
His previous research has interrogated the ways that racial, religious, gendered, and political ideologies are transmitted through sports media, in addition to digital history epistemologies. He has published widely in academic journals and books, with his most recent publications analysing historical representations on sports concussion in the Australian newspaper press. His teaching and research interests span multiple spheres of sport and culture, as he seeks to critically understand the ways that people have historically constructed and transmitted meaning through sport and physical activity.
Availability
- Dr Stephen Townsend is:
- Not available for supervision
- Media expert
Fields of research
Research interests
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History of Sports Concussion
Stephen's research examines the social, cultural, and medical history of brain injuries in sport.
Research impacts
Stephen's research engages with multiple critical issues in sport, physical activity, and leisure cultures, including health discourses, gender, race, religion, politics, protest, and press discourses. His current research aims better understand the often-invisible cultural forces that shape how sportspeople make decisions regarding their brain health. Most recently, Stephen's research has been cited in the Australian Senate Inquiry into Repeated Head Trauma in Sport and through various media appearances.
His previous research has critically press attitudes toward black athletes, especially outspoken black athletes like Muhammad Ali. Stephen's research helps us to better understand not only how sociocultural factors shape athlete experiences of sport, but also how public attitudes toward sport and athletes are shaped. His research also incorporates digital tools and methodologies. His use of digital tools, methodologies, and visualistions not only has significant implications for practitioners of history but also for members of public searching for new and more engaging ways to consume historical narratives.
Works
Search Professor Stephen Townsend’s works on UQ eSpace
2019
Journal Article
Clay vs. Ali: Distant Reading, Methodology, and Sport History
Townsend, Stephen, Osmond, Gary and Phillips, Murray G. (2019). Clay vs. Ali: Distant Reading, Methodology, and Sport History. Journal of Sport History, 46 (3), 380-395. doi: 10.5406/jsporthistory.46.3.0380
2018
Journal Article
Remembering the rejection of Muhammad Ali: identity, civil rights and social memory
Townsend, Stephen, Phillips, Murray G. and Osmond, Gary (2018). Remembering the rejection of Muhammad Ali: identity, civil rights and social memory. Sport in History, 38 (3), 1-22. doi: 10.1080/17460263.2018.1474129
2015
Journal Article
A Bird’s-Eye View of the Past: Digital History, Distant Reading and Sport History
Phillips, Murray G, Osmond, Gary and Townsend, Stephen (2015). A Bird’s-Eye View of the Past: Digital History, Distant Reading and Sport History. International Journal of the History of Sport, 32 (15), 1725-1740. doi: 10.1080/09523367.2015.1090976
2014
Book Chapter
Wicked Wikipedia: communities of practice, the production of knowledge and Australian sport history
Townsend, Stephen, Osmond, Gary and Phillips, Murray G. (2014). Wicked Wikipedia: communities of practice, the production of knowledge and Australian sport history. Sports History. (pp. 269-286) edited by Wray Vamplew. Abingdon, Oxon, UK: Routledge.
2013
Journal Article
Wicked Wikipedia? Communities of practice, the production of knowledge and Australian sport history
Townsend, Stephen, Osmond, Gary and Phillips, Murray G. (2013). Wicked Wikipedia? Communities of practice, the production of knowledge and Australian sport history. International Journal of the History of Sport, 30 (5), 545-559. doi: 10.1080/09523367.2013.767239
Media
Enquiries
Contact Dr Stephen Townsend directly for media enquiries about:
- Concussion
- History
- Olympic and Paralympic Games
- Protest and Activism
- Race
- Sport
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