Football in France: A Cultural History

Football in France: A Cultural History

by Geoff Hare
Football in France: A Cultural History

Football in France: A Cultural History

by Geoff Hare

Paperback

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Overview

France's performance in the 2002 World Cup brought back painful memories of a time when France was a weak contender in world and European football - a time when national or club teams rarely won, and the French were renowned for having little interest in the game. Today, football plays a unique role in French society. French players and coaches are highly sought after abroad and the national team has chalked up significant recent victories, including a World Cup and European Championship. This book is the first in English to examine the extraordinary cultural, economic, and political history behind French football's development throughout the twentieth century and up to the present day. It focuses on the past twenty years and concludes with a discussion of the fallout from the World Cup 2002. Imported from Britain by the middle classes in the late nineteenth century, football entered French national consciousness between the wars. As with everywhere else in Europe, the game helped to unite communities and forge new social identities. Although the State has generously supported youth coaching, the evolution of the professional sport has been slow due to tight community control, high taxes and lack of income from paying spectators. In a bid to compete successfully in Europe, the owners of France's big city clubs are seeking to commercialize the game, despite the resistance of central and local authorities. Hare traces the gradual evolution of traditional French football values and explores the impact of new and controversial business practices. Have French football's influential club chairmen sold out to business values and television? Why has the national team been so successful when club teams have not? How are top clubs being re-branded to catch a national and international audience of consumers? What role does the modern supporter play, and what are the links between businessmen, politics and the commercialization of the sport? What is peculiarly French about French football, and what does football tell us about France? Hare also pays specific attention to issues relating to race and racism. He looks at racist attitudes among fans, and considers how the multi-cultural and multi-racial population of France is reflected in the national football team. This book not only provides a fascinating cultural history of French football, but also an engrossing account of how national identity and community values are being transformed and reshaped in the global marketplace.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781859736623
Publisher: Berg Publishers
Publication date: 04/01/2003
Series: Global Sport Cultures
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Geoff Hare Retired Senior Lecturer in French, University of Newcastle upon Tyn

Table of Contents

Contents
List of Tables vii
Acknowledgements ix
Glossary xi
1 Introduction: Studying French Football 1
2 Establishing Football in the French National Consciousness 19
3 Towns and Cities: a Socio-economic Geography of French Football Clubs 47
4 Fans: a Sociology of French Club Football 77
5 Coaches: Building the Successes of French Teams 115
6 Players: 'les Bleus' and French National Identity 150
7 Television: Football as Spectacle and Commodity 179
8 Chairmen: Business, Politics, and Corruption 196
9 Conclusions: French Exceptionalism vs. Commodification 224
Appendix 244
Bibliography 247
Index

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