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| Tracie Canada, Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology
 Tracie Canada is the Andrew W. Mellon Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology and Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies at Duke University. She is the founder and director of the HEARTS (Health, Ethnography, and Race through Sports) Lab and is affiliated with the Duke Sports & Race Project. As a cultural anthropologist and ethnographer, she researches and teaches about race, sport, kinship, and the performing body. Her research has been supported by the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship, the National Science Foundation, the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, and the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics. She is also a NSF CAREER Award grantee.
For more information, please visit her website: www.traciecanada.com.
Her book, Tackling the Everyday: Race and Nation in Big-Time College Football (University of California Press, 2025), is an ethnography about the lived experiences of Black college football players. This work moves off the gridiron into the daily lives of the young Black athletes that sustain this American sport. Informed by more than a year of ethnographic research at universities in the southeastern United States, this book tells how institutional systems and everyday spaces order, discipline, and enact violence against Black players. Through an analysis of college athletes, Blackness, and two types of care, she argues that Black college football players successfully move through their everyday lives by reimagining certain kinship relationships and relying on various geographies of care.
An overall goal of her ethnographic research is to recenter and decanonize not only what we consider to be anthropological knowledge, but also who we consider to be academic and public knowledge producers. She is committed to bringing current social, political, and popular culture events into the intellectual conversation, and to highlighting how valuable lived and embodied knowledge can be. In her current and future projects, she aims to acknowledge what football, and the lived experiences of its Black players, can tell us about racial, historical, political, and power dynamics in the contemporary United States. She is particularly interested in the performing body to reveal how social hierarchies and inequalities manifest in embodied practice and how processes of violence and care are both impactful.
- Contact Info:
Teaching (Spring 2026):
- CULANTH 803S.01, ETHNOGRAPHY
Synopsis
- Friedl Bdg 118, M 03:20 PM-05:50 PM
- Education:
| Ph.D. | University of Virginia | 2020 |
| A.B. | Duke University | 2012 |
- Keywords:
- Anthropology, Cultural • Ethnography • Football • Kinship • Race • Universities and colleges
- Recent Publications
(More Publications)
- Canada, T, Black Anti-Bodies at Play,
American Anthropologist, vol. 127 no. 4
(December, 2025),
pp. 848-851, Wiley [doi] [abs]
- Canada, T, The Mothers Who Built the Game: Honoring Black Women’s Labor in Football
(May, 2025), Essence
- Canada, T, Turning the Spyglass of Anthropology to Tackle Football,
Kinesiology Review, vol. 14 no. 2
(May, 2025),
pp. 134-142, Human Kinetics [doi] [abs]
- Canada, T, Tackling the Everyday Race and Nation in Big-Time College Football
(February, 2025),
pp. 253 pages, Univ of California Press, ISBN 9780520395664 [abs]
- Canada, T, The Troubling Truth About the World War II-Era Rose Bowl That Became Part of American Sports Lore
(2025), TIME
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