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2009 | 47 | 1 | 20-27

Article title

Sport and Globalisation: Homogenization and Differentiation

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The development of the worldwide market has motivated long-ranging consequences, not only at the level of growing economic interdependencies, but also in the globalization of cultures and lifestyles. At any of these dimensions, sport plays a role and contributes in its own particular way to globalization. Transnational organizations, worldwide events, transnational communities and transnational structures organised around the central theme of Sport provide good evidence of that phenomenon. However, the way these dimensions interrelate at a time of unorganised capitalism is based on disjuncture. Following this thesis, Appadurai (1996) has proposed an elementary scheme for the analysis of the disjuncture between the several dimensions of globalization, suggesting the notion of landscapes to underline the fluid and irregular shape of the capital flow, pertaining to both communications and lifestyles. By emphasising that globalization is intensively perceived according to, and influenced by the historical, linguistic and political contexts of the intervening players, the author deliberately focuses on the imagined worlds that help us construct those landscapes. In this paper, we will retrieve some of those theoretical leads and analyse three types of landscape in the leisure and sports contexts, in an attempt to demonstrate how their interrelation is one of disjuncture, where some dimensions promote sports homogenization while others push towards increasing differentiation. We will analyse the mediascapes (Sport as global spectacle), the technoscapes (the role of the new media and velocity in the creation of decontextualised global cognitive maps), and the ideoscapes (the role of images and the aesthetisation of the leisure sports experiences)

Publisher

Year

Volume

47

Issue

1

Pages

20-27

Physical description

Dates

published
1 - 12 - 2009
online
13 - 1 - 2010

Contributors

author
  • Faculty of Sport Sciences and Physical Education, University of Coimbra, Portugal

References

  • Andrieu, B. (2004). A nova Filosofia do corpo. Lisboa: Instituto Piaget.
  • Appadurai, A. (1996). Modernity at Large. Cultural Dimensions of Globalization. University of Minnesota.
  • Bromberger et alli (1995). Le Match de football: Ethnologie d'une passion partisane à Marseille, Naples et Turin. Paris: Maison des Sciences de l'Homme.
  • Chazaud, P. (2004). Management du tourisme et des loisirs sportifs de pleine nature. Lyon: PUS.
  • Coakley, J.J. (1998). Sport in Society (6a Ed.). Boston: McGraw-Hill.
  • Eco, U. (1986). Faith in Fakes. London: Secker & Warburg.
  • Hacking, I. (1986). Making up people. In T. C. Heller, M. Sosna e D. E. Wellberg (Eds.), Reconstructing Individualism (pp. 222-236). Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Huyssen, A. (1986). After the great divide. Bloomingtone Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
  • Jameson, F. (1984, 1991). Postmodernism or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
  • Kerckhove, D. (1997). A Pele da Cultura. Lisboa: Relógio d'Água.
  • Roseneau, J. (1990). Turbulence in World Politics. Brighton: Harvester.
  • Virilio, P. (1991). The Aesthetics of Disappearance. New York: Semiotext(e).

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.-psjd-doi-10_2478_v10141-009-0028-7
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