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

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

Eamon Bousa PCQ 2

Class, Ethnicity and Color in the Making of Brazilian Football

-The article discusses how the elites in Brazil picked up soccer from the British.  Some of the elites of Brazil would send their children to school in England and when the students returned they would bring soccer back with them and the popularity of the sport grew quickly.  The clubs that were first founded were elitist in nature and also functioned as social clubs.

“The clubs turned into places for urban socializing; by providing participation in or attendance at physical and sporting activities, they prolonged the receptions and soirées bringing together the dominant families from early twentieth-century sobrados (town mansions) in those two cities”(242).

-Football expanded to factory clubs where upper class managers and overseers would introduce the game to workers who would adopt it.  Barriers prevented working classes from mastering the game though due to them lacking the free time and money that the upper class could devote to learning the game.  Over time though workers who were skilled were afforded certain privileges.

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PCQ #2

Class, Ethnicity, and Color in the Making of Brazilian Football:

Lopes describes that what while football began as organized social events for the elites it ultimately became a way for Brazils highly disparate population to recognize each other.  This can be seen through Vasco de Gama’s choice of players, popularity, and support and work to “proletarianize” football. (Lopes, 248)  This movement was continued by Internacional and through the national team as well.  However, there are still problems. This can be seen through their description of Ronaldo, who grew up poor and was successful as a soccer player.  But, “by doing so, they focused on Brazilian football as a model for helping poor youngers… marketing thus aestheticizes poverty…” (pg. 240) This is problematic because it encodes that it is okay to be poor and one can escape using football, but is not solving any social problems, essentially giving false hope.

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Mac PCQ 1/7/14

The First reading for tonight had a quote that is important to my theme in this class. I am writing about American’s making money through the business of soccer. The article explained where that money comes from, though not specifically for Americans.

“Many of these factors are related to the live transmission by television of matches and championships from all over the world. Competitions have come, in consequence, to involve larger values, leading to greater commercial interest in the sport. The number of different professionals connected to football (medical staff, trainers, physiotherapist, show business and marking experts, sports media, security staff, service workers, and so forth) has also grown tremendously” (Lopes, 239-240). Continue reading

Jordan Adams TIFO 1

http://espnfc.com/news/story/_/id/1655540/david-beckham-making-progress-miami-franchise-plans?cc=5901

This is an article that discusses the possibility of bringing an MLS team to the city of Miami. The reason I a posting about this article is because I am thinking about focusing my final paper on the creation of the MLS and the growth it has made over the years to become more relevant within the American sports world. I also thought it could be interesting to see how other sports leagues are handling the introduction of American soccer potentially taking away a certain amount of revenue from their already established fan bases. David Beckham helped bring a lot of attention towards American soccer when he decided to play for the LA Galaxy, this new project of his continues to attract buzz and is a good sign that the MLS is going to continue to grow and become more popular in the American sports world.

Jordan Adams PCQ 2

Class Ethnicity and Color in the making of Brazilian Football PCQ

 

The Football of Brazilian Elites

This section of the reading brings back the idea that soccer was used as a way to help English settlers establish relationships with some of the locals around the colony. Football was a means of staying busy for English workers without the inclusion of any Brazilian players. Because the game was mainly played solely by the English it was easy to associate the game as something meant solely for the upper classes. People frequented the game in suits and ties similar to how baseball games originally became popular. The leisurely activities early on have always been linked to the elite classes because they could afford not to be working all day. The origins of football in Brazil seem to have begun as a spectacle where players and spectators went to see and be seen by members of their own social status.

“Players also frequented dances at the clubs; playing football regularly was one of the several characteristics of an elite lifestyle. Several football clubs were made up of university students, and access to law, medicine, and to a lesser extent engineering was a form of social reconversion. For the declining Brazilian rural aristocracy, or an expanded reproduction of the new scholarized urban elites.” (243) 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.

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Basic Definitions PCQ

 “Theories of Race:”

Michael Banton runs through the evolution of the idea of Race, ultimately saying that Race is an antiquated idea.  The European world began to try to document the world and their place in it, which brought about scientific racism, or the promoting of the white “race” over the different kinds.  This continued through the Darwin times and started to change in the early 20th century.  Early social science began saying the racism was learning in the 1920s and now is less of an overt problem, but is becoming more subtle thing.

“Race:”

Mikaila and Lemonik set up a similar argument to Banton, but also add cultural context.  They say that “while people have always found ways to stratify and differentiate in-groups from out-groups, the concept of race emerged relatively recently in human history.” (pg. 5) This is important with the context of the nation because nationalism often relied on a created alienation to rally around, which racism also accomplished.  Another interesting quote is from W.I. Thomas, who said “if people define a situation as real, it is real in its consequences.” (pg. 6)  This quote can also relate to the idea of the nation and culture and can be used to reflect either the building of the national identity, with or without racism.  This also reflects an understanding the situation of having multiple nations within one country, like the Vasques or Catalans in Spain.

“Sport and Race:”

Carrington gives a great short summary of race, saying “… racial distinctions are based on arbitrarily chosen physical features, such as skin color and hair texture, that are used to demarcate people into groups.  Thus, “race” is a complex system of representation learned through socialization, and then acted upon as if these distinctions were ‘real.’” (pg. 9) This is a quick and easy definition of race.  Carringtons notes that sports are often used as forms of political resistance, like how Barcelona became the cultural center for Catalans and their team became more than just a soccer team when they were under the regime of Franco.

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Carter TIFO 1

This article pertains to the issue of racism in football today. While football has come along way since its time in Brazil during the early 20th century, the issue of racism is still an ever-present factor during international football matches. We see how CSKA Moscow fans racially abused Yaya Toure, a Manchester City player, during a match in Russia a few months ago. While this is incident is very concerning, an even more pressing issue is the fact that Russia will be hosting the 2018 World Cup and is also fighting with gay rights activists as the Winter Olympics are on the verge of commencing in Russia as well.

http://en.ria.ru/sports/20131024/184335202/Organizers-Defend-Russias-World-Cup-Amid-Football-Racism-Claims.html