CUNY Medgar Evers College History and Sport Essay

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CUNY Medgar Evers College

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One example (could be ongoing or one event or one person, etc) of what we learn about both a local political and global political history through sport.

Attaching an example that could be used. Could include the current events if need be as well.

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African Soccerscapes: How a Continent Changed the World’s Game (review) Benjamin D. Lisle Journal of Sport History, Volume 38, Number 1, Spring 2011, pp. 135-136 (Review) Published by University of Illinois Press For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/453858 [ This content has been declared free to read by the pubisher during the COVID-19 pandemic. ] REVIEWS: BOOKS REVIEWS Book Reviews GERALD R. GEMS, EDITOR North Central College ANNETTE HOFMANN, EDITOR Ludwigsburg University of Education, Germany ALEGI, PETER. African Soccerscapes: How a Continent Changed the World’s Game. Africa in World History Series. Athens: Ohio University Press, 2010. Pp. xviii+184. Notes, illustrations, bibliography, and index. $22.95 pb. African Soccerscapes introduces readers to the history of soccer throughout Africa—a timely exercise given South Africa’s hosting of the 2010 World Cup finals. Historian Peter Alegi demonstrates that the African game has played an important role in the broader history of football (it is “soccer” only in the title). Football in Africa, Alegi argues, has been both a tool of imperialism and a mechanism for resisting it. Although the title teasingly suggests a geographical emphasis, the book is chronologically structured. Alegi breaks the 150-year history of African football into multi-decade periods. Within each chapter—six in all, plus an epilogue that anticipates the 2010 World Cup finals—he bounces from location to location. In the telling, he examines and revisits a series of themes, including African struggles for independence from European imperialism and control over sport, the development of national identities through football, and the influence of transnational capitalism on the game. His account is almost wholly grounded in secondary sources published in English and French. Some useful maps, tables, and illustrations are sprinkled throughout (nine in total). The prose is highly readable, appropriate for undergraduates and general audiences. Alegi begins by charting the arrival and spread of football in Africa from the first games in the 1860s—played by British soldiers and civil servants in South Africa—through the first two decades of the twentieth century. By then, football had become central to African education as an instrument of colonization—a moral and healthy outlet to temper NOTE: The editorial team is seeking potential book reviewers. Anyone interested please register their areas of expertise with Jerry Gems at grgems@noctrl.edu. Spring 2011 135 JOURNAL OF SPORT HISTORY the supposed savagery of Africans. The game spread throughout the continent from port cities along railway lines, via colonial military forces and Western-style schools run by missionaries. The author argues that Africans then adopted the game and refashioned it on their own terms. As football’s popularity expanded during the interwar period, Africans introduced magicians and healers, stylistic innovations that expressed improvisational individualism, and new rituals of spectatorship—typically marked by music and dancing—to football cultures. By the 1940s and 1950s, anti-colonial nationalist movements linked clubs and fans; stadiums became spaces where Africans expressed commitment to selfdetermination and racial equality. As Africans won their independence, the Confédération Africaine de Football (CAF), created in 1957, cultivated a pan-African solidarity, fought against apartheid, and campaigned to expand the number of African teams in the World Cup finals. African governments built modern stadiums that became centers for the construction and performance of national identities and articulations of governmental power and stability. Membership in FIFA expressed new countries’ participations in an international community. As African national teams experienced increasing success on the world stage, players migrated overseas to ply their trade. The reader is introduced to many past African stars, including Salif Keita, Eusebio, Roger Milla, Abedi Ayew Pelé, George Weah, and Nwankwo Kanu. These players paved the way for an explosion of African footballing migrants to Europe in the late 1990s—players increasingly young of age and vulnerable to exploitation by agents and coaches. The more recent commercialization and globalization of African football at its elite levels have rendered uneven results at home. The best African players now spend most of their careers in European leagues, not African ones. Privately funded football academies have filled the void created by cutbacks in public funding of youth programs; these have successfully produced world-class players for foreign leagues but often exploit young players, preparing them little for a life outside of football. Women’s football, long neglected by the male-dominated sporting establishment, has finally been officially recognized and supported by the CAF, under pressure from FIFA and corporate sponsors. Alegi argues that the 2010 World Cup finals in South Africa illustrate the continued significance of race, racism, nationhood, and capitalism in African soccer. Through it, South Africa and the continent as a whole would use football to demonstrate political achievement, stimulate economic growth (a problematic strategy, he acknowledges), and forward African membership in a global community. African Soccerscapes is a readable and convenient entry point into African football. The scope of the project—a continent and 150 years in 132 pages—makes the experience incomplete and a bit frenzied, like viewing a foreign landscape through the window of a speeding tour bus. Readers are continually parachuted into and air lifted out of different decades and regions. But as a compact primer on African football, it succeeds as best it could, giving readers a sense of the continent’s rich football history and a healthy list of secondary sources through which they may deepen their understanding. —BENJAMIN D. LISLE University of Texas at Austin 136 Volume 38, Number 1
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Running Head: POLITICAL HISTORY THROUGH SPORTS

Political History through Sports
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POLITICAL HISTORY THROUGH SPORTS

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When individuals think of sports, things that come out relate to competition, having fun,
getting entertainment, and among other things. However, the role of sports can be observed in
various in a variety of areas. Historically, sports have been demonstrated as being part of
political development at both local and global levels (Seippel et al., 2018). For instance, the 2010
world cup event that took place in South African sparked research on the role football played
during the African struggle for liberation—the journey towards the 2010 world cup in South
African dates back during the colonial period. The impacts of historical events tend to have some
influence even in the current world concerning football sporting activity. The focus would be on
the history of football in African and how it influenced the politics of the region.
As mentioned, the 2010 world event was the starting point for historical analysis as
pursed by a historian known as Peter Alegi. According to the Africa Soccerscapes book, the
readers are introduced to an African game that arguably played a role in shaping the larger
history of football. The historian projects the history of football a...


Anonymous
Awesome! Perfect study aid.

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