<p>This book analyses leisure choice as a complex concept, made more complicated</p><p>in later life than at any other time. The author posits that there are many</p><p>unanswered questions about the new booming generation of healthy, older</p><p>people, and this book asks what it is really like to
Football Fans and Social Spacing: Power and Control in a Modernising Landscape (Leisure Studies in a Global Era)
✍ Scribed by Ian Woolsey
- Publisher
- Palgrave Macmillan
- Year
- 2021
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 182
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This book is about the relationship between leisure and power. More specifically, it theorizes a group of supporters’ attempts to control social space within and around English football stadiums. Not only is football a popular leisure form, it is also one which has undergone a remarkable process of transformation during the last 30 years. Advance surveillance techniques, all seater-stadia, rising ticket prices, and a growing intolerance to expressive modes of fandom have all transformed the experience of watching the professional game.
Through these five chapters, Ian Woolsey asks how the collective responses of travelling football supporters to these major societal currents and changes within the game; liquid modernity and the post-1989 transformation of English football, are managed via the distinct and oft-competing processes of social spacing in football. An important inspiration for the book is the work of Zygmunt Bauman, particularly his ideas on cognitive, aesthetic, and moral ‘spacings’ as a social production. Ian Woolsey’s powerful and persuasive application of these ideas not only extends Bauman’s focus on the ‘politics’ of power in public space to include a consideration of leisure but in so doing shows that ethnography, selectively conducted and theoretically informed, can provide data for a rich, sociological account of a football world.
The book will be of interest to researchers and scholars of sociology of leisure, sociology of sport, criminology, and cultural studies.
✦ Table of Contents
Preface
References
Acknowledgments
Contents
1 This Space Is Our Space
Introduction
Every Person Has Their Place
A History of Cultural Struggle
Consuming ‘Us’
Theoretical Framework
Sheffield (Wednesday)
Book Outline
References
2 Cognitive Foundations
Introduction
On Belonging and Home
Family Values: Finding Home
Exeter Away
On Interpretation and Shared Understandings
Hermeneutic Communities
Fostering Shared Understandings
Knowledgeable Actors and the Absolute Spirit
Doing Things Our Way: Loyalty, Singing, Standing, and Drinking
Summary
References
3 Cognitive Spacing: Defending the Hermeneutic ‘Community’
Introduction
The Salesman Cometh—On Modernisation and Strangers
Are You Dumping Me? Exclusion, Sanitisation, Community, and Tradition
‘It’s not Church’—Control, Banter, Boozing, and Swearing
Bauman, Vorhanden, and the Right to Stand Up
Let There Be Light: Phagic Strategies and the Promise of Salvation
‘It’s Who We Are’: Vorhanden and Ontological Security
Ontological Security
Nostalgia: A Home Without an Entrance?
Summary
References
4 Moral Spacing
Introduction
Moral Spacing: A Brief Overview
Good Supporters/Bad Supporters? On Kierkegaard and False Dichotomies
Saints and Rituals: Morality Without Guidelines
Charity Begins at Home?
What Is Moral Action?
Where Have All the Real Men Gone?
Right Place, Right Time: On Tradition, Maturity and Swearing
Not in Front of the Children: Aesthetic ‘Eithers’, Moral ‘Ors’
On Violence and Morality
Self-Alienation: What About Your Other Family?
Resolving the Tension: Situationist Salvation
We’re not All Wednesday Are We? On Belonging and Racism
We’re All Wednesday Aren’t We?
Summary/Reflection
References
5 Aesthetic Spacing
Introduction
Coming Out to Play?
Grey Hairs and Bloodshot Eyes
A Day Out with the Gods: On Atmospheric Experiential Intensity
A Day Out with the Lads: On Amusement and Morality
Experiential Intensity, Drinking, and Brotherhood
Heavenly Aesthetics: Searching for Novelty
Novel Places
Arrested Developments
Caging the Congregation: On Policing and Modernisation
Summary
References
6 Away from Nothing
Introduction
The Final Whistle
References
Index
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>This book examines the power definiteness of landscape from a social constructivist perspective with a particular focus on the importance of aesthetic concepts of landscape in development. It seeks to answer the question of how societal notions of landscape emerge, how they are individually updat
<p><span>This edited volume brings together interdisciplinary scholarship on children’s everyday leisure from across the globe, addressing key questions around children’s agency, rights, child-adult relations, and social change. It is positioned to inaugurate a new frontier of research within leisur
<p><p>This book concerns the Beijing Hutong and changing perceptions of space, of social relations and of self, as processes of urban redevelopment remove Hutong dwellers from their traditional homes to new high-rise apartments. It addresses questions of how space is humanly built and transformed, c
This book provides a historical-sociological analysis of recreational scuba diving practices. Starting from a national case study, Greece, the book analyzes the gradually evolving global institutional arrangements of this version of underwater recreational activities. Based on the author’s experienc