REPLAY: Film documenting the 3rd IJMS Conference and Exhibition, London 2013 Tim Fransen In 2013, I arranged for a recent Creative Media Production graduate, Alex Thraves, to implement his newly acquired skills by documenting the 3rd IJMS Conference and Exhibition held 4–7 July at the Chelsea College of Art and Design – here's the excellent film to replay and reminisce ...

IJMS: A History Steven Alford & Suzanne Ferriss In 2000, a PhD candidate in Borderland studies at the University of Texas at El Paso had an idea. Gary Kieffner created the Motorcycling Myth and Culture area for the regional Southwest/Texas branch of the American Culture/Popular Culture conference and posted a call for papers for their 2001 meeting in Albuquerque, New Mexico. A handful of motorcycling scholars ...

On the eve of the 10th anniversary of the IJMS, the Voice inside my helmet remembers … Lisa Garber “You should have known,” mumbles the Voice. It was a fair comment. Sitting in the simmering San Antonio heat, waiting for the shuttle to take me to my hotel, I thought of the man who had referred me to this place and this conference. The smooth talking Texan was my dissertation chair: a professor, poet, Jungian psychologist and a motorcycle rider. I guess I should have known ...

Conference Cancellation Notice / 5-10-15 Special Summer Anniversary Issue In response to the COVID-19 crisis, the International Journal of Motorcycle Studies board has decided to cancel the 2020 IJMS Conference and put our efforts into a Special Summer Anniversary Issue of the journal and begin the planning for the 2021 conference. A detailed CFP for the Special Summer Anniversary Issue will be announced in the next month...

The Gendered Motorcycle: Representation in Society, Media and Popular Culture Book Review By David Walton During the last few years I have had the good fortune of reading (and, in some cases, reviewing) some excellent books on a range of motorcycle cultures. We have seen Randy McBee’s excellent Born to be Wild: The Rise of the American Motorcyclist (2017) which chronicles the subject matter with marvelous scholarly acumen in such a way that it will, I am sure, become a classic in the genre ...

Rider Self-Reports on the Beneficial Effects of Motorcycle Riding H. Paul LeBlanc III Motorcyclists choose to engage in an activity known to themselves, their loved ones and the general public to be risky to health and life. The question for many is why? As a motorcyclist, and a scholar, I am keenly aware of the seeming contradiction between the drive for survival and the engagement in an activity that can result in serious injury or death …

An Autoethnographic Exploration of Social Identity and Leadership within a Motorcycle Club Todd C. Wiggen Autoethnography is a form of qualitative research in which the researcher utilizes self-reflection to examine their experiences in the context of a greater cultural and social environment. This autoethnographic study provides an in-depth examination of the development and maintenance of social identities within a voluntary association – a military motorcycle club …

The Heterotopia of an Off-shore Island: Popular Culture, Hegemony, Tourism, Identity and the Question of Death at the Isle of Man TT David Walton This article is based on a pilot study I carried out entitled 'Place, Space and the Isle of Man TT: Probing the Boundaries of Hegemony through Popular Culture' which was published in the ebook The Playing Field: Making Sense of Spaces and Places in Sporting Cultures (eds Colin Howley and Susan Dun, Oxford: Inter-disciplinary Press, 2016). This is the full version of this research …