Football Italia: Italian Football in an Age of Globalization: Globalizing Sport Studies
Autor Dr Mark Doidgeen Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 mai 2015
Preț: 568.34 lei
Preț vechi: 816.20 lei
-30% Nou
Puncte Express: 853
Preț estimativ în valută:
108.78€ • 113.07$ • 90.11£
108.78€ • 113.07$ • 90.11£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 04-18 februarie 25
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472519191
ISBN-10: 1472519191
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Globalizing Sport Studies
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472519191
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Globalizing Sport Studies
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Contains strong ethnographic fieldwork, archive research and interviews with fans institutions associated with Serie A.
Notă biografică
Mark Doidge is Lecturer in Sport and Service Management, University of Brighton, UK
Cuprins
1. Introduction - Globalisation and Italian Football2. Globalisation and Community3. Modernity and Deregulation in Italy4. Deregulation and Crisis in Italian football5. The Tempest: A Twenty-First Century of Scandal6. The Matchday Experience: Italian Stadiums7. The Matchday Experience: Italian Forces of Order8. The Matchday Performance: Football Fandom in Italy9. The Livornesi Performance: The Local and the Political10. The Social Capital of Italian Supporters' Clubs11. Conclusion: 'Year Zero?
Recenzii
Few football books manage to provide the breadth and depth of insight with the very obvious passion for the game that Mark Doidge combines in writing Football Italia. From the country of Gramsci and Mussolini it is no surprise that Italian football also is a game of extremes. What Doidge manages to explain is how a nation's football can never be divorced from how a national culture has been shaped too.
Following the extraordinary success of its World Cup in 1990, chic Italian football assumed a position of sporting and cultural dominance in Europe for over a decade. No longer. In a clinical dissection, Mark Doidge shows how the neo-patrimonialism of Silvio Berlusconi's regime, which facilitated the rapid advance of Italian football two decades ago, has ensured its eventual stagnation and decline today. Ironically, while it is easy to disparage the commercialisation of English football, Doidge demonstrates what happens to a footballing nation which is too corrupt to reform itself when federations, clubs, media and government are too weak or self-interested to insist upon change. This book represents a very significant advance for the contemporary sociology of sport in the United Kingdom and will be essential reading to all interested in European football.
Mark Doidge's research effectively illustrates characters, origins and developments of the decline of football in Italy. Football is investigated as a social subsystem characterized by interactions with political processes and social changes. The analysis of the causes of the decline thus helps to understand why it represents a metaphor of the crisis of the larger social system. The documentation offers an updated and complete review of investigations and points of view by providing a critical contribution of great interest.
Through incisive and persuasive analysis, Mark Doidge investigates the factors that have led Italian football to its present crises. By examining both the actions of individuals and structural considerations, he finds that the problems of Italian football have their origins in Italian history and the country's incapacity to effectively manage globalization.
[Doidge] assesses the rise and fall of calcio since Italia 90, placed in the country's social, political and economic contexts. It's a long read, but a good one.
Following the extraordinary success of its World Cup in 1990, chic Italian football assumed a position of sporting and cultural dominance in Europe for over a decade. No longer. In a clinical dissection, Mark Doidge shows how the neo-patrimonialism of Silvio Berlusconi's regime, which facilitated the rapid advance of Italian football two decades ago, has ensured its eventual stagnation and decline today. Ironically, while it is easy to disparage the commercialisation of English football, Doidge demonstrates what happens to a footballing nation which is too corrupt to reform itself when federations, clubs, media and government are too weak or self-interested to insist upon change. This book represents a very significant advance for the contemporary sociology of sport in the United Kingdom and will be essential reading to all interested in European football.
Mark Doidge's research effectively illustrates characters, origins and developments of the decline of football in Italy. Football is investigated as a social subsystem characterized by interactions with political processes and social changes. The analysis of the causes of the decline thus helps to understand why it represents a metaphor of the crisis of the larger social system. The documentation offers an updated and complete review of investigations and points of view by providing a critical contribution of great interest.
Through incisive and persuasive analysis, Mark Doidge investigates the factors that have led Italian football to its present crises. By examining both the actions of individuals and structural considerations, he finds that the problems of Italian football have their origins in Italian history and the country's incapacity to effectively manage globalization.
[Doidge] assesses the rise and fall of calcio since Italia 90, placed in the country's social, political and economic contexts. It's a long read, but a good one.