ABSTRACT

Sport and Secessionism examines how sporting cultures reflect, inform and sometimes frustrate secessionist movements around the world. Investigating a wide range of cases, the book explores key themes including nationalism, nation building, state-region antagonisms, independence movements, identity and ethnic politics, sovereignty and autonomy processes, all through the lens of sport.

Sports are uniquely positioned to shed light on secessionist politics due to their pervasiveness in society, and their ability to absorb, reflect and produce political projections. The book presents analyses of a wide range of geographical, cultural and political contexts in which sports are deployed to pursue regional independence, or greater sovereignty and autonomy, and explores the dual processes of sub-national identity construction and state sovereignty deconstruction. The book includes fourteen cases from such diverse parts of the world as Ireland, Taiwan, Turkey, Catalonia, Biafra, Canada and the UK, among others.

Offering a unique perspective on an important geopolitical issue, this book is fascinating reading for anybody with an interest in sport and politics, the sociology of sport, political science, political geography, nationalism studies or international history.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|14 pages

Speaking for Wales

Sport and secessionism in a small nation

chapter 4|17 pages

A game of lions and devils

Sport as a driver and inhibitor of Flemish secession

chapter 5|19 pages

The tug of war of nationalisms

Agonic sports for Basque–Spanish relations

chapter 6|18 pages

Visions of building, specters of collapse

Alternative routes to secessionism in Catalonia

chapter 7|13 pages

Football in Corsica

From the pride of being French to the desire not to be?

chapter 8|19 pages

Living through defeat

Hungarian–Romanian relations through Szekler hockey

chapter 9|17 pages

Two styles of engagement

Kurds and football in Turkey 1

chapter 11|14 pages

Assembling the diasporic nation

Kabylia at the CONIFA World Football Cup

chapter 13|17 pages

“One China with respective interpretations” no more?

The struggle between China/PRC and Taiwan/ROC in sport

chapter 14|15 pages

The Montreal hockey nation

Ethnic and/or civic attachments?