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El. knyga: Football, Culture and Power

Edited by (Washington State University, USA), Edited by , Edited by (University of British Columbia, Canada)

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What does it mean when a hit that knocks a human being unconscious is experienced as pleasurable by viewers? When these athletes and their families are suffering long-term damage from this harm and yet such suffering is rarely put into narrative? And when a players tattoos or social media controversies results in greater attention and litigation than the social stances of players?

This book brings together scholars, writers and commentators to examine the relationship between football, violence and the larger relations of power in which we all live our lives. Within the context of the NFL and the structural conditions in which the NFL has emerged, this book explores issues of racism, sexism and homophobia as a window into the social, political and cultural imprint of America’s national pastime. The book argues that the NFL reveals a collective psychic participation, by which our subjectivity is formed within historical systems of violence, power, and hierarchy. The NFL’s participation in and production of hegemonic masculinity, alongside its practices of racism, sexism, heterosexism, and ableism, allows us to think deeply about the historical and contemporary systems of violence we are invested in and entertained by. Football becomes a cultural text to examine and learn from. The book also recognizes that the NFL also performs good in the world, drawing together communities, providing platforms for players to reach out to young athletes across class and race, and to inspire the best in what sports offers people. Through an analysis of American football and intersecting social issues, this book provides a language for critique that can generate conversation and accountability.

Recenzijos

'This collection represents a topical and worthwhile contribution to the growing body of scholarship that probes American footballs cultural power and politics. Its coverage of such a broad range of topicsfrom able-ism to Black Lives Matter to social media to domestic violenceusefully demonstrate footballs enduring and multifaceted role as a framework through which to consider popular cultures problems and potential.' - Travis Vogan, Assistant Professor, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Iowa, USA

'David J. Leonard, Kimberly B. George, and Wade Davis have put together a timely and potent compendium of essays on football and the social, historical, political, and economic forces that shape the playing field. The authors skilfully address the intersection of football and issues of race, gender, sexuality, commodification, violence, and popular culture. With essays that examine theories of embodied practice, politics, and power, Football, Culture and Power is a must read for sports studies and cultural studies scholars.' - Samantha Sheppard, Assistant Professor of Cinema and Media Studies, Cornell University, USA

Notes on contributors xi
Foreword xiv
Marc Lamont Hill
Acknowledgments xvii
Football, culture and power: an introduction 1(8)
Kimberly B. George
David J. Leonard
1 Football's history and reach
9(18)
Russ Crawford
2 Look away: on the racial, sexual, and cultural politics of the NFL
27(17)
C. Richard King
3 Bailers without Blackness: the suppression of Black cultural agency in the NFL
44(15)
Drew D. Brown
4 Derelictum ex nihilo: origins and beginnings in The Blind Side
59(27)
Jared Sexton
5 God-Fans of the gridiron: Madden, fantasy, football, and simulation
86(14)
Nicholas Ware
6 "4th and g(l)o(b)al": origins, evolution and implications of a globalized NFL
100(22)
Jorge E. Moraga
7 Fabled futures: migration and mobility for Samoans in American Football
122(17)
Fa'Anofo Lisaclaire Uperesa
8 Everybody's all-Americans: high school football and the US military
139(17)
Michael L. Butterworth
9 Gender, violence, and brain injury in and out of the NFL: what counts as harm?
156(20)
Daniel R. Morrison
Monica J. Casper
10 A Societal Mirror and a Force for Change: The NFL and its Response to Domestic Violence
176(19)
Jessica Luther
11 In dialogue: on sports, sports activism, sexual freedom, and other types of liberation
195(8)
Darnell L. Moore
Bennie Niles
12 Michael Sam and the sport of queer failure
203(9)
Jeffrey Q. Mccune Jr.
13 "U Mad Bro?" NFL player use of social media in contentious conversation
212(16)
Phillip Lamarr Cunningham
14 The NFL, activism, and #BlackLivesMatter
228(26)
Charles Modiano
15 A Feminist Football Fan: On the Psychic Life of Spectatorship
254(21)
Kimberly B. George
Index 275
David J. Leonard is a Professor at Washington State University, USA and author of After Artest: The NBA and the Assault on Blackness.

Kimberly B. George is a Ph.D. student in Ethnic Studies at UC San Diego, USA. She is also a writing consultant and an entrepreneur of alternative forms of critical social theory based education.

Wade Davis is a former NFL player, educator, writer and public speaker on gender, race, and LGBT rights. He is an NFL diversity consultant, a former surrogate for President Obama, and the recipient of an Honorary Doctorate of Public Service from Northeastern University, USA.