“…This body of scholarship includes discussions on surf localism(s) and diverse surfing subjectivities as resistance to white-male-dominated heteronormative modern surfing culture and associated neocolonial tourism development, as well as counter-narratives on non-modern surfing histories existing both prior and in parallel to Western colonization and appropriation (Comer, 2010(Comer, , 2017Walker, 2011Walker, , 2017Laderman, 2014;Ingersoll, 2016;Dawson, 2017aDawson, , 2017blisahunter, 2017, 2018a, 2018b, 2018cRuttenberg & Brosius, 2017Wheaton, 2017;Olive, 2019). In their efforts to make more visible the indigenous, localized and often marginalized histories, bodies, knowledges and sociocultural experiences that exist both within and outside Western surfing culture, critical surf scholars engage with critical race theory and decolonial frames to critique surf-related colonization and appropriation (Walker, 2011;Comer, 2016;Comley, 2016Comley, , 2018Gilio-Whitaker, 2017Jefferson, 2020), exalt non-Western surfing histories and epistemologies (Walker, 2006(Walker, , 2011(Walker, , 2017Ingersoll, 2016;Dawson, 2017aDawson, , 2017bDawson, , 2018, and support intersectional feminist resistance to patriocolonial constructs in surfing spaces (Comer, 2017;lisahunter, 2017;Olive, 2019). reflexivity to analyze researcher subjectivity and embodied surfer experiences across multiple/intersectional axes in "patriocolonial" surfing spaces (Comer, 2010;Nemani, 2015;Olive, 2015…”