1st Edition

Sport and Nationalism Theoretical Perspectives

Edited By Stuart Whigham Copyright 2024

    Sport and Nationalism: Theoretical Perspectives aims to advance the academic study of the interconnections between sport and nationalism by, firstly, reviewing the current ‘state of play’ in this field of study and, secondly, highlighting the potential for the development of future theoretically-informed analysis of the relationship between sport, nationalism and national identity.

    This book offers a critical appraisal of the utility of various theoretical concepts used to explore the nature of contemporary nationalism when applied to the specific topic of sport. Bringing together a range of contemporary academics in this field of study, it offers an opportunity to showcase contrasting theoretical positions on this topic. Furthermore, the central focus of the book regarding extended application of theories of nationalism to the field of sport provides an opportunity for novel and critical contributions to this field of study.

    This book will be beneficial to students, researchers and professionals with an interest in sport and in the relationship between sport, politics and nationalism. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Sport in Society.

    Introduction: Sport, nationalism, and the importance of theory
    Stuart Whigham

    1. Sport, British national identities and the land: reflections on primordialism
    Alan Bairner and Anthony May

    2. Soccer, the Saarland, and statehood: win, loss, and cultural reunification in post-war Europe
    Alec S. Hurley

    3. Challenges and complexities of imagining nationhood: the case of Hong Kong’s naturalized footballers
    Andy Chiu

     4.  Banal Europeanism? Europeanisation of football and the enhabitation of a Europeanised football fandom
    Regina Weber

    5. Norbert Elias’s concept of the ‘drag-effect’: implications for the study of the relationship between national identity and sport
    Tom Gibbons

    6. ’I am German when we win, but I am an immigrant when we lose’. Theorising on the deservedness of migrants in international football, using the case of Mesut Özil
    Gijs van Campenhout and Henk van Houtum

    7.  Building American Supermen? Bernarr MacFadden, Benito Mussolini and American fascism in the 1930s
    Ryan Murtha, Conor Heffernan and Thomas Hunt

    8. Sport and the ‘national Thing’: exploring sport’s emotive significance
    Jack Black

     9. Everyday bordering. Theoretical perspectives on national ‘others’ in sport and leisure time physical activity
    Sine Agergaard and Verena Lenneis

    10. Analysing British Asian national sporting affiliations post-London 2012
    Alison Forbes

     11 Hegemony, domination and opposition: Fluctuating Korean nationalist politics at the 2018 Winter Olympic Games in PyeongChang
    Jung Woo Lee

     12. They are not ‘Team New Zealand’ or the ‘New Zealand’ Warriors! An exploration of pseudo-nationalism in New Zealand sporting franchises
    Damion Sturm, Tom Kavanagh and Robert E. Rinehart

     13. Nation as a product of resistance: introducing post-foundational discourse analysis in research on ultras’ nationalism
    Mateusz Grodecki

    14. Guerrilla patriotism and mnemonic wars: cursed soldiers as role models for football fans in Poland
    Przemysław Nosal, Radosław Kossakowski and Wojciech Woźniakc

    Biography

    Stuart Whigham is Senior Lecturer in Sport, Coaching and Physical Education at Oxford Brookes University, UK. His research interests revolve around the sociology and politics of sport, with a particular interest in the study of national identity, nationalism and sport; the politics of sport and sporting events; the politics of the Commonwealth Games; the sociology and politics of Scottish sport; and, sport and the Scottish diaspora.