“The most intriguing parts of the book are where historical details of specific sports—cricket, soccer, Gaelic football, hurling, speed skating, baseball—are offered as evidence for the essayists' arguments on how the local interacts with outside forces, whether protecting, mimicking or influencing.” (<i>YaleGlobal Online Magazine</i>, May 2009)
Globalization and Sport is a unique collection which places sport at the heart of debates on global processes.
- Features major critical interventions by some of the world's leading sociologists and anthropologists on the subject of sport
- Contributors include George Ritzer, David Andrews, Frank Lechner, William Kelly, Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Barry Smart, Paul James, Chris Rumford and Gary Armstrong
- Provides a mixture of original theories and fresh research material, examining sport in a diversity of settings, including Europe, the Americas, Australasia, Africa and Asia
- Essential reading for anyone interested in globalization processes or sport
2. Not Playing Around: Global Capitalism, Modern Sport and Consumer Culture: Barry Smart.
3. The Grobal in the Sporting Glocal: David L. Andrews and George Ritzer.
4. Steps to an Ecology of Transnational Sports: Thomas Hylland Eriksen.
5. Recovering the Social: Globalization, Football and Transnationalism: Richard Giulianotti and Roland Robertson.
6. Is Baseball a Global Sport? America’s ‘National Pastime’ as Global Field and International Sport: William W. Kelly.
7. More Than a Game: Globalization and the Post-Westernization of World Cricket: Chris Rumford.
8. Imagined Communities in the Global Game: Soccer and the Development of Dutch National Identity: Frank J. Lechner.
9. The Global Footballer and the Local War-Zone: George Weah and Transnational Networks in Liberia, West Africa: Gary Armstrong
The chapters provide a mixture of original theories and fresh research material, examining sport in a diversity of settings, including Europe, the Americas, Asia, Africa, and Australasia.
The book will be essential reading for anyone interested in globalization processes or sport. It will appeal to students and academics across disciplines, notably in sociology, anthropology, sport studies, cultural studies, political science, and international relations.
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Richard Giulianotti is Professor of Sociology at Durham University.Roland Robertson is Professor of Sociology and Global Society at the University of Aberdeen.