The book is an ethnographic study of a women's roller derby league in Edinburgh, UK.[1] The book is a published version of her PhD thesis, which she completed at the University of Edinburgh in 2014.[2] It examines "seriousness" in roller derby, and how gender influences the way the sport is represented, played and experienced.[3]
Breeze, Maddie; Taylor, Y; Lahad, K (2018). "Imposter syndrome as a public feeling". Feeling academic in the neoliberal university: feminist flights, fights, and failures. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
Breeze, Maddie (2013). "Analysing "Seriousness" in Roller Derby: Speaking Critically with the Serious Leisure Perspective". Sociological Research Online. 18 (4).
Breeze, Maddie (2010). "There's No Balls in Derby: Roller Derby as a Unique, Gendered Sports Context". The International Journal of Sport and Society. 1 (3): 121–133. doi:10.18848/2152-7857/CGP/v01i03/54028.
^Adele., Pavlidis (2016). Sport, Gender and Power The Rise of Roller Derby. Fullagar, Simone., Jones, Meredith. London: Taylor and Francis. p. 12. ISBN9781317051077. OCLC1022794734.