ABSTRACT

Soccer has long been known as 'the beautiful game'. This multi-disciplinary volume explores soccer, soccer culture, and the representation of soccer in art, film, and literature, using the critical tools of aesthetics, poetics, and rhetoric.

Including international contributions from scholars of philosophy, literary and cultural studies, linguistics, art history, and the creative arts, this book begins by investigating the relationship between beauty and soccer and asks what criteria should be used to judge the sport’s aesthetic value. Covering topics as diverse as humor, national identity, style, celebrity, and social media, its chapters examine the nature of fandom, the role of language, and the significance of soccer in contemporary popular culture. It also discusses what one might call the ‘stylistics’ of soccer, analyzing how players, fans, and commentators communicate on and off the pitch, in the press, on social media, and in wider public discourse.

The Aesthetics, Poetics, and Rhetoric of Soccer makes for fascinating reading for anybody with an interest in sport, culture, literature, philosophy, linguistics, and society.

part |10 pages

Pep talk

chapter |8 pages

Klopp’s Heideggerianism 1

part |14 pages

Taking the field

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

part |82 pages

First half

chapter 1|17 pages

Good games as athletic beauty

Why association football is rightly called ‘the beautiful game’ 1

chapter 3|28 pages

“England ’til I die”

Soccer, national identity, and contemporary art 1

part |54 pages

Half time

chapter 5|17 pages

The man in the dugout

Fictional football managers and the politics of resistance

chapter 6|15 pages

The importance of trivial oppositions in football fandom

The narcissism of minor differences in derby games 1

chapter 7|20 pages

Stupidity in football

part |114 pages

Second half

chapter 8|19 pages

“Caveman stuff”

Ireland’s soccer struggle with identity, style, and success

chapter 9|18 pages

The beautiful and the grim

British cultural discourses of the Eastern European game

chapter 10|27 pages

“Text sex with Becks”

Football celebrities, popular press, and the spectacle of language