"Sometimes, a book comes along that not only resonates deeply on a personal level but also serves as a rich and thought-provoking resource for analytical exploration. . . . With profound insights and a sharp sociological lens, Ratna crafts a narrative that is both deeply personal and globally relevant, leaving the reader questioning their role and complicities in challenging and/or upholding the social inequalities in the worlds of sports and the academy. Grounded in the traditions of Black, Brown and ethnic other feminisms, Ratna offers novel methodological and analytical concepts to scrutinise the potential of sporting spaces for contesting and reproducing intersecting forms of discrimination and inequalities." (idrottsforum.org) “Philosophically expansive, theoretically sophisticated, and methodologically complex, <i>A Nation of Family and Friends?</i> charts new intertextual terrains that elevate our understandings of South Asian diasporas, race, gender, ethnicity, class, and leisure. With incredible analytic precision, Aarti Ratna provides a must read for those interested in the politics of belonging, nationalism, and ethno-nationalism. A brilliant book in the service of social justice!”<br /> - Stanley I. Thangaraj (author of Desi Hoop Dreams: Pickup Basketball and the Making of Asian American Masculinity) “<i>A Nation of Family and Friends?</i> offers a much-needed exploration into the sporting and leisure experiences of South Asian women, which has thus far lacked visibility and depth of analysis. I commend Aarti Ratna on the work put into this project and her determination to create something unique and against the grain.” - Courtney Szto (author of Changing on the Fly: Hockey through the Voices of South Asian Canadians)
Ratna also examines two key cultural objects - the popular films "Bend it Like Beckham" and “Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal” - to examine in detail the gendered representation of South Asian soccer players’ engagement in amateur and elite levels of the sport. She critiques studies of women’s football fandom and sport that fail to acknowledge social differences relating to race, class, age, disability, and sexuality. By linking the social forces (across time and space) that differentially affect their sporting choices and leisure lifestyles, Ratna portrays the women of the South Asian diaspora as active agents in the shaping of their life courses and as skilled navigators of the complexities affecting their own identities. Ultimately Ratna examines the intersections of class, caste, age, generation, gender, and sexuality, to provide a rich and critical exploration of British Asian women's sport and leisure choices, pleasures, and lived realities.