“…In making surfing both the subject and object of study in the oceanic South, critical surf studies have contributed to both hydrocolonialism literature, in studies of surfing, culture, and politics in apartheid and post-apartheid South Africa (Samuelson, 2014;Thompson, 2014), and hydrofeminist literature, by studying surfing as a space for activism against sexist, racist, homo/transphobic, and ableist sporting practices (Graaff, in press). Hydrofeminism also swims with critical surf studies from the North, in Krista Comer's (2019) and Cori Schumacher's (2017) theorising of the term surfeminism for scholarship and activism, which draws on feminist and queer studies of surfing (Comer, 2010;Comley, 2016;Knijnik, et al, 2010;lisahunter, 2017;Olive, 2019;Roy, 2013). As Comer notes, Surfeminism thus names a thinking project in which feminism is a theory of power relating to women, girls, heteronormative sexuality, and sport, as well as indispensable in critical analyses of global political economies and surfing's dominant political ideals of freedom.…”