Category Archives: Football in Latin America and the Caribbean

Marta’s Masterful Talents in Germany (Seth Browner TIFO 1/15/14)

Marta Skillfully Maneuvers towards Brazilian victory in Women’s World Cup

In the Women’s World Cup in Germany, the Brazilian women’s national team was set against the Norwegian women’s team in Wolfsburg. Although Norway has typically been a backwater European football power, the women’s game has enjoyed some success in international tournaments. Brazil, naturally, enjoys much prestige and respect at the very mention of soccer. However, the South American country’s athletic celebrity is a result of the efforts of the individual footballers that compete in canary yellow and vibrant blue. Marta reaffirms this pivotal truth through her talented display of competence over her Norwegian opposition. Her performances not only propelled Brazil to victory in this World Cup game, but caught the attention of the transnational soccer community as a adroit female athlete.

Female Athlete Reports on Treatment of Female Players in Brazil (Seth Browner TIFO 1/14/14)

Caitlin Fisher Condemns the Portrayal of Women Footballers in Brazil

Caitlin Fisher, a former US soccer player and Santos FC footballer, reports in this short video on the feminization of female players in the Brazilian women’s league.  A graduate of Harvard University, she currently works in collaboration with South American football players in various charity organizations meant to push for the expansion of the women’s game. In her discussion, Fisher acknowledges improvement in the public’s favorable perception of female soccer, yet does not fail to raise points where steps forward have yet to be taken. TEDTalks host a variety of commentators of which she is featured.

Aline Pellegrino Comments on Women’s Soccer in Brazil (Seth Browner TIFO 1/13/14)

Female Footballer Divulges the Inequalities in the Football-Crazed Nation of Brazil

Brazil, famous for its lush jungles and sunny beaches, is a hub of success international soccer playing. Claiming more World Cup titles than any other country, football is an indispensable facet of its diverse society. However, the hidden side to this athletic fanaticism is that the nation’s love of football is highly unequal. Women soccer players receive little acclaim. The sport has many steps to take before it can catch up to the level it is practiced at for men. Brazilian international player Aline Pellegrino deplores these inequities and succinctly elaborates on her active front to ignite the women’s soccer movement in an article in Public Radio International.

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/

TIFO: “A Century of Soccer Migration” – by Eamon Boussa

This short article and video shows how players were traded between countries between 1900 and 2013.  The video shows little to no trading from 1900 to around 1950 where trades begin to increase substantially.

There is a further increase in the 1970s and a massive number of transfers in the past two decades.  Throughout the video it is clear the majority of player transfers involve Europe.

Gabriel Maletta PCQ2

Lopes article tracks the growth of soccer in Brazil, beginning with the early games played by Europeans and the elite up until Brazil’s 1998 run to the World Cup in France where the national team fielded a racially and socially mixed team. He pays particular attention to the steady increase of non-white players, either mestizo or black, in the ranks of Brazilian club and national teams. The rise of Brazil’s non-European soccer greats mimics the history described by Carrington in his “Sport and Race” article. Carrington argues that sport, seen through the lens of imperialism and race, was initially reserved for the colonizers or the elite. This was true in the case of Brazil as it was only Europeans or those exposed to a European schooling that were able to indulge in the sport. It was only through ‘factory-teams’ that football reached the working classes of Brazil and spread like wildfire. Continue reading

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.

 Continue Reading Continue reading

Early Football, Race, Ethnicity and National Identity in Brazil – by Cole Sylvester

Cole PCQ 1/7/2014

An interesting idea that the article, The Making of Brazilian Football, brings up is the idea that soccer is a sport that can be learned and played by any social or economical class.  It is an easy game for young children to pick up and practice even if they come from a very poor background such as Ronaldo Luís Nazário de Lima.

“stocking balls served the purpose for the sandlot games hotly disputed by barefoot players, with goalposts easily improvised from any variety of possible materials”

Soccer became more than just a fun activity for many of the nation’s youth, especially because of the prospects of being drafted to more elite teams.  These elite teams were mainly sponsored by European factories with money to pay the players to play.  They also gave rival cities a chance to compete against each other without actually fighting.  Each team would try and out-play, out-support, and out-fund their rivals.  An environment like this was very conducive to training formidable Brazilian players who had strong national and regional pride for their team.  For them, soccer became a way of life rather than an interesting pastime. Continue reading

Race, Nationalism, Globalization and Sports – by Cole Sylvester

Cole PCQ 1/6/2014

The article, Theories of “Race” by Michael Banton, takes a look at the idea that “race” does not have a biological reason or empirical existence. Rather, the idea that there are separate “races” of humans who are in some way cognitively or physiologically different from one another gets turned on its head in the 1920s with the advent of racial sociology. Race became known as a mental reaction that “made [distinctive peoples] conscious of what distinguished them” thus “social life built up frustration which individuals released on to scapegoats in the form of displaced aggression”.

The “distinctive peoples” mentioned in Robert E. Park’s ecological theory were only made separate by European capitalism’s need for cheap un-free labor. Because of the early advent of the idea of separate distinctive races, human society has created an environment of subconscious discrimination for anyone who is perceived as different, much like the thinking of 19th century scientists divided Homo sapiens into three subspecies (or races). Instead of a philosophy of inferiorization and exploitation of the 19th century subspecies, our modern globalized society has instead turned to ethnic, religious, and economical “races” that we still create prejudices and discriminate against. Continue reading