Whose game is this? An overview at the role of football in the construction of national identity

In this paper I will consider the ways in which national identity is constructed through football, by analyzing different case studies foremost in the countries of Western Europe which are, in public narratives, signified as “developed”. I will attempt to point out the fact that, despite the weaken...

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Main Author: Ivan Đorđević
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Belgrade 2016-02-01
Series:Etnoantropološki Problemi
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eap-iea.org/index.php/eap/article/view/33
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spelling doaj-8b2b62fffd8c48ea9cff1cef6584ac302020-11-24T23:21:17ZengUniversity of BelgradeEtnoantropološki Problemi 0353-15892334-88012016-02-019110.21301/eap.v9i1.5Whose game is this? An overview at the role of football in the construction of national identityIvan Đorđević0The Institute of Ethnography SASA Belgrade In this paper I will consider the ways in which national identity is constructed through football, by analyzing different case studies foremost in the countries of Western Europe which are, in public narratives, signified as “developed”. I will attempt to point out the fact that, despite the weakening of the prerogative of the nation-state, the identity which refers to such a state is still strong, and that football is one of those cultural elements though which such identification is encouraged and supported. On the other hand, through analyzing the “nation building” through football project in countries which, supposedly represent the ideal for a transitional country like Serbia, in both the economic and political sense, it is my intent to point out that the ideology of nationalism and its instrumentalization in the media, such as that given in the examples, is by no means locally specific nor connected to so-called “insufficiently modernized societies”, where this term, in itself has the ideological weight in context – that we could thus refer to certain societies as “enough” or “completely” modernized. On the contrary, these models, more or less, function the same way everywhere, only they are historically determined, and greatly dependent on momentary power relations, or that which the dominant discourse in continual hegemonic struggles defines as the desirable image of “nation”, “economy” or anything else. https://eap-iea.org/index.php/eap/article/view/33footballnational identitymedia discourseWestern Europe
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ivan Đorđević
spellingShingle Ivan Đorđević
Whose game is this? An overview at the role of football in the construction of national identity
Etnoantropološki Problemi
football
national identity
media discourse
Western Europe
author_facet Ivan Đorđević
author_sort Ivan Đorđević
title Whose game is this? An overview at the role of football in the construction of national identity
title_short Whose game is this? An overview at the role of football in the construction of national identity
title_full Whose game is this? An overview at the role of football in the construction of national identity
title_fullStr Whose game is this? An overview at the role of football in the construction of national identity
title_full_unstemmed Whose game is this? An overview at the role of football in the construction of national identity
title_sort whose game is this? an overview at the role of football in the construction of national identity
publisher University of Belgrade
series Etnoantropološki Problemi
issn 0353-1589
2334-8801
publishDate 2016-02-01
description In this paper I will consider the ways in which national identity is constructed through football, by analyzing different case studies foremost in the countries of Western Europe which are, in public narratives, signified as “developed”. I will attempt to point out the fact that, despite the weakening of the prerogative of the nation-state, the identity which refers to such a state is still strong, and that football is one of those cultural elements though which such identification is encouraged and supported. On the other hand, through analyzing the “nation building” through football project in countries which, supposedly represent the ideal for a transitional country like Serbia, in both the economic and political sense, it is my intent to point out that the ideology of nationalism and its instrumentalization in the media, such as that given in the examples, is by no means locally specific nor connected to so-called “insufficiently modernized societies”, where this term, in itself has the ideological weight in context – that we could thus refer to certain societies as “enough” or “completely” modernized. On the contrary, these models, more or less, function the same way everywhere, only they are historically determined, and greatly dependent on momentary power relations, or that which the dominant discourse in continual hegemonic struggles defines as the desirable image of “nation”, “economy” or anything else.
topic football
national identity
media discourse
Western Europe
url https://eap-iea.org/index.php/eap/article/view/33
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