Football Fans and Social Spacing: Power and Control in a Modernising Landscape
This book is about the relationship between leisure and power. More specifically, it theorizes a group of supporters’ attempts to control social space within and around English football stadiums. Not only is football a popular leisure form, it is also one which has undergone a remarkable process of transformation during the last 30 years. Advance surveillance techniques, all seater-stadia, rising ticket prices, and a growing intolerance to expressive modes of fandom have all transformed the experience of watching the professional game.

Through these five chapters, Ian Woolsey asks how the collective responses of travelling football supporters to these major societal currents and changes within the game; liquid modernity and the post-1989 transformation of English football, are managed via the distinct and oft-competing processes of social spacing in football. An important inspiration for the book is the work of Zygmunt Bauman, particularly his ideas on cognitive, aesthetic, and moral ‘spacings’ as a social production. Ian Woolsey’s powerful and persuasive application of these ideas not only extends Bauman’s focus on the ‘politics’ of power in public space to include a consideration of leisure but in so doing shows that ethnography, selectively conducted and theoretically informed, can provide data for a rich, sociological account of a football world.

The book will be of interest to researchers and scholars of sociology of leisure, sociology of sport, criminology, and cultural studies.

1139080843
Football Fans and Social Spacing: Power and Control in a Modernising Landscape
This book is about the relationship between leisure and power. More specifically, it theorizes a group of supporters’ attempts to control social space within and around English football stadiums. Not only is football a popular leisure form, it is also one which has undergone a remarkable process of transformation during the last 30 years. Advance surveillance techniques, all seater-stadia, rising ticket prices, and a growing intolerance to expressive modes of fandom have all transformed the experience of watching the professional game.

Through these five chapters, Ian Woolsey asks how the collective responses of travelling football supporters to these major societal currents and changes within the game; liquid modernity and the post-1989 transformation of English football, are managed via the distinct and oft-competing processes of social spacing in football. An important inspiration for the book is the work of Zygmunt Bauman, particularly his ideas on cognitive, aesthetic, and moral ‘spacings’ as a social production. Ian Woolsey’s powerful and persuasive application of these ideas not only extends Bauman’s focus on the ‘politics’ of power in public space to include a consideration of leisure but in so doing shows that ethnography, selectively conducted and theoretically informed, can provide data for a rich, sociological account of a football world.

The book will be of interest to researchers and scholars of sociology of leisure, sociology of sport, criminology, and cultural studies.

129.99 In Stock
Football Fans and Social Spacing: Power and Control in a Modernising Landscape

Football Fans and Social Spacing: Power and Control in a Modernising Landscape

by Ian Woolsey
Football Fans and Social Spacing: Power and Control in a Modernising Landscape

Football Fans and Social Spacing: Power and Control in a Modernising Landscape

by Ian Woolsey

Paperback(1st ed. 2021)

$129.99 
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Overview

This book is about the relationship between leisure and power. More specifically, it theorizes a group of supporters’ attempts to control social space within and around English football stadiums. Not only is football a popular leisure form, it is also one which has undergone a remarkable process of transformation during the last 30 years. Advance surveillance techniques, all seater-stadia, rising ticket prices, and a growing intolerance to expressive modes of fandom have all transformed the experience of watching the professional game.

Through these five chapters, Ian Woolsey asks how the collective responses of travelling football supporters to these major societal currents and changes within the game; liquid modernity and the post-1989 transformation of English football, are managed via the distinct and oft-competing processes of social spacing in football. An important inspiration for the book is the work of Zygmunt Bauman, particularly his ideas on cognitive, aesthetic, and moral ‘spacings’ as a social production. Ian Woolsey’s powerful and persuasive application of these ideas not only extends Bauman’s focus on the ‘politics’ of power in public space to include a consideration of leisure but in so doing shows that ethnography, selectively conducted and theoretically informed, can provide data for a rich, sociological account of a football world.

The book will be of interest to researchers and scholars of sociology of leisure, sociology of sport, criminology, and cultural studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783030745349
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Publication date: 06/10/2021
Series: Leisure Studies in a Global Era
Edition description: 1st ed. 2021
Pages: 170
Product dimensions: 5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x (d)

About the Author

Ian Woolsey is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Sheffield Hallam University.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: This Space Is Our Space.- Chapter 2: Cognitive Foundations.- Chapter 3: Cognitive Spacing: Defending the Hermeneutic ‘Community’.- Chapter 4: Moral Spacing.- Chapter 5: Aesthetic Spacing.- Chapter 6: Away from Nothing.
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