1st Edition
Sport, Physical Activity, and Anti-Colonial Autoethnography Stories and Ways of Being
Proem
1. Writing Sport and Physical Activity Autoethnographically: “The Stories That Will Make a Difference Aren’t the Easy Ones”
2. Situating the Author, Interrogating Canada: (Un)sett(l)ing the Stage
3. Anti-Colonial Autoethnography
4. Outdoor Recreation, the Wilderness Ideal, and Complicating Settler Mobility
5. Pedagogies of White Settler Masculinity: (Un)Becoming(?) Settlers
6. O Canada? (Be)longing, (Un)certainty, and White Settler Inheritance
7. (Autoethnographic) Futures: “Something as Yet Unimagined”
Biography
Jason Laurendeau is Associate Professor with the Department of Sociology at the University of Lethbridge in Alberta, Canada. His research interests include settler colonialism, gender, risk, childhood, research methodology generally, and autoethnography in particular.






