1st Edition

Sport in Iceland How Small Nations Achieve International Success

By Vidar Halldorsson Copyright 2017
152 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

152 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

152 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Iceland is a tiny Nordic nation with a population of just 330,000 and no professional sports leagues, and yet its soccer, basketball and handball teams have all qualified for major international tournaments in recent years. This fascinating study argues that team sport success is culturally produced and that in order to understand collective achievement we have to consider the socio-cultural... Read more

Preface: "The general within the particular"

Part I: Setting the Scene

1. Introduction: "Small" teams and "big" results

2. From Nature and Nurture, to Culture: Theoretical basis and methods

3. Sport in Iceland: History, culture and organization

Part II: How Icelandic Sports Progressed

4. Building the Infrastructure: Towards professionalism

5. New Conditions, New Generations, New heights

Part III: How Icelanders Play Sport

6. The Icelandic "Madness": Winning the character contest

7. Teamwork: Playing your own game

Part IV: How Culture Affects Sport

8. The Value of Play

9. The Advantages of Small Populations

Part V: How It All Comes Together

10. Conclusion

Appendix

Biography

Vidar Halldorsson is an assistant professor in sociology at the University of Iceland

"In general, the book sheds an informative light on the Icelandic sports system and Icelandic culture as explanations for sporting success ... All in all, the book is well written and insightful, hence it is warmly recommended." - Eivind Å. Skille, Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences

"A timely investigation of an alternative state model of sport … Halldorsson effectively situates Iceland’s sporting achievements within the country’s distinct cultural and social context. His assertions regarding the importance of sociocultural context for elite performance have the potential to encourage further research attention to this topic. As one of a diminishing number of countries willing to maintain a widespread and publicly supported community sporting structure, Iceland provides a successful model of sport for its own intrinsic values." - Daniel Eisenkraft Klein, University of Toronto, International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics