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Scoring Off the Field: Football Culture in Bengal, 1911-80
Contributor(s): Bandyopadhyay, Kausik (Author)
ISBN: 1138659967     ISBN-13: 9781138659964
Publisher: Routledge Chapman & Hall
OUR PRICE:   $18.95  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: January 2016
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History
- Social Science | Popular Culture
- Social Science | Sociology - Urban
Dewey: 796.334
Series: South Asian History and Culture
Physical Information: 0.72" H x 5.51" W x 8.5" (0.88 lbs) 346 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

This book examines how football, as a mass spectator sport, came to represent a novel, unique cultural identity of Bengali people in terms of nation, community, region/locality and club, contributing to the continuity of everyday socio-cultural life. It explains how football became a viable popular social force with a rare emotional spontaneity and peculiar self-expressive fan culture against the background of anti-imperial nationalist movement and postcolonial political tension and social transformation. In the process, it investigates certain key questions and problems in the social history of football in Bengal, which have hitherto been ignored in the existing works on the subject.



The author offers some original arguments in treating football as a cultural phenomenon, setting it squarely in the context of Bengali politics and society. It strengthens the premise that social history of South Asian sport can be meaningfully understood only by looking beyond the sports field. The study, using sport as a lens, has tried to consider some relevant themes of social history, and brings forth important issues of political and cultural history of 20th-century Bengal. Simultaneously, it highlights the transformed role of football as an instrument of reaction, resistance and subversion. It indicates that the football field of Bengal proves to be a mirror image of what society experiences in its cultural and political field, through a series of historical projections of identity, difference and culture.