Author Archives: Seth Browner

About Seth Browner

First-Year student at Trinity College.

Gender Equality in Caribbean Soccer (Seth Browner TIFO #3 1/9/13)

Empowering Young Women in Haiti with Soccer

In the aftermath of the destructive earthquake in Haiti, many opportunities for the advancement of women in society have been curtailed or eliminated. However, through an organization called HAVSERVE, the misfortunes suffered by Haitians are being ameliorated. A site dedicated to promoting volunteerism, this organization seeks to provide aid to penurious families and assist in the realization of the UN’s Millennium Development Goals in Haiti. Ms. Nicole Findlay has catalogued her experiences and hopes on the organization’s blog, HAVBLOG, empowering Haitian women through soccer playing. Not only promoting gender equality in sports, this project brings a new opportunities for women in the undeveloped world to gain a sense of community.

http://www.havserve.org/blog/gender-equality-and-empowerment-through-soccer/

British Origins of Football and Decline of Parisian Clubs (Seth Browner PCQ 1/8/13)

On Boswoth Field or the Playing Fields of Eton and Rugby? Who Really Invented Modern Football?, by Peter Swain and Adrian Harvey

I think it is important to begin this PCQ by acknowledging how the ascension of football to athletic prominence in the British Isles follows a trickle down pattern. Originally a sport for gentlemen, the lower middle class are largely responsible for introducing football as a spectator sport and popularizing it nationwide. This trend is similar to the trends that football followed in Brazil. Played by the landed nobility in their bucolic settings, it spread to the lower tiers of society with the arrival of immigrants and factory sponsored teams.

I think it is not ironic that the patterns of British soccer are very close to that of Brazil. First of all,  soccer’s early proponents were young educated individuals in or finishing school. In England, football “stemmed from public schools” (Swain and Harvey). To elaborate on further parallels, there was some ethnic tension in recruiting athletes. Like black people in South America, Scots were often met with obstacles when attempting to play in English clubs and their admittance on to a team was contentious. Overtime, this prejudice diminished; the same deterioration occurred in Brazil.

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Seth Browner TIFO #1 1/7/13

Women in Soccer: Marta, the World’s Most Prominent Female Footballer

Soccer is sport, at the international level, dominated by men. Male international tournaments receives far more attention and investment than do those for women. On that same note, high-accomplishing women in soccer are dramatically less acclaimed than are men. Marta, a Brazilian women soccer player, emerge fantastically as a female who succeeds despite the tendencies in global football to accolade men more illustriously. Developing her talents by playing street games, she often faced exclusion and was forced to practice techniques using a ball of plastic bags as an improvised soccer ball. She has since risen to fame as ardent advocate for the advancement of women in football and received FIFA’s World Player of the Year five consecutive times beginning in 2006. I felt, as this is my first TIFO, a small biography of her is appropriate given that she is incontrovertibly the most celebrated and skilled female soccer player at this time.

 

http://www.biography.com/people/marta-21322927

Seth Browner TIFO #2 1/8/13

FIFA Women’s World Cup 2015 in Canada

 

The world’s largest tournament for female soccer, the FIFA Women’s World Cup, is scheduled to take place in 2015, the year after the men’s, in Canada. Begun in 1991, the games have provided female footballers with opportune moments to display their athletic competence on the global stage. Unlike the Men’s World Cup, a nation outside of Europe and South America boasts a victory: the Japanese female team won the title in 2011. Even the United States, a country whose soccer continuously lags behind that in Europe and Latin America, has gained much prestige from its triumph in the Women’s World Cup of 1999. Now, the stage is nearly set for the tournament to take place once in again in Canada. International teams in Africa and North America, and their subsequent federations CAF and CONCACAF, are in the qualifying rounds. Officials representing the cities in which the games will occur met in Ottawa to discuss with FIFA associates the complex advertising and preparation that the Women’s World Cup demands.

 

 

 

http://www.fifa.com/womensworldcup/news/newsid=2197048/index.html

Seth Browner PCQ 1/7/14

Class, Ethnicity, and Color in the Making of Brazilian Football, José Sergio Leite Lopes

Brazil is the titan of international soccer tournaments; it boasts more FIFA World Cup victories than any other competing soccer nation. As the author Lopes begins, soccer has been globalized in Brazil. There has been a transition from “national to multinational” and Brazilian athletes are entering new spheres of athletic competition in East Asia- such as Japan (Lopes 240). This worldwide expansion, I believe, is oftener studied by economist, sociologists, and historians too often in the modern context. There is much validity to suggest that this connectivity, as we know it today, emerged after the resurgence of neo-liberalism in the 1980s with Ronald Reagan’s and Margaret Thatcher’s policies of deregulation and privatization. However, Brazil’s history of football, the now indispensable feature of the country’s culture, displays the same notions of globalization.

Football was brought to Brazil by the European immigrants long before the era of Reagan and Thatcher. In fact, British influence played the most direct and influential role in bringing football to South America. Educated students of respectable lineage in Brazil’s peerage system began to form clubs. Soccer at this point was a form recreation reserved for the elite of Brazilian society. The author notes how the clubs were places for “urban socializing” and that soccer’s expansion was the result of the efforts of “scholarized urban elites” (Lopes 243). As Professor Xiangming Chen notes in his book on urban studies, cities are places of cosmopolitan activity; fast-changing popular culture is born in cities and is modified in cities, mostly. Soccer’s evolution in the cities of Brazil, such as São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, is consistent with this verifiable truth that urban areas are the centers of budding cultural developments.

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Race, Nationalism, Globalization and Soccer, by Seth Browner

Race, as Michael Banton details in the article Theories of “Race”, was first academically described by the intellectuals in Europe. Observing the inequalities between European colonizers and the impecunious colonized, many “attributed inequality in development to different biological inheritance” (Banton 1).

Furthermore, race was used as a classification system, as discussed in another article by Mariel Mikalia and Arthur Lemonik. One can certainly claim today that race is not the sole cause of poverty or underdevelopment; the first analyzers of race, I believe, were mistaken. I believe the educated Europeans who initially explored race studies confused with an observation with an explanation and failed to delve deeper into certain topics.

To start, I believe these academics noted the disparities in the quality of life between themselves and those in their colonies. Unable to explain this phenomenon, they attributed the gap to race, since these trends of racial minorities in squalor were nearly ubiquitous throughout the age of imperialism. Then, these academics hence failed to examine further than this point until Darwinism introduced new ideas of fitness and survival, which were subsequently linked to caucasian superiority. Continue reading