Presentation Transcript
PR 1450Introduction to Globalization: PR 1450 Introduction to Globalization
Lecture 11
Globalization and Sport
Chris Rumford
Slide2: Winning a world cup competition or an Olympic gold medal are amongst the highest sporting achievements
Such triumphs help make sportsmen and women famous all over the world
But what are the global dimensions of sport, and what is the relationship between world cups and the Olympic games and globalization?
Slide3:
Some sports have strong claims to be global e.g. football
But what about less high-profile sports, or sports which are played only in certain parts of the world?
Slide4: On 28 October 2007 the Miami Dolphins and the New York Giants played at Wembley.
This was the first competitive, regular-season NFL game to be played outside the US.
Slide5: Cricket may be included in the 2020 Olympic Games.
In December 2007 the International Olympic Committee provisionally recognized the sport.
Cricket last appeared in Olympics in the Paris Games of 1900.
Slide6: Read the article ‘New world order’ by Brian Oliver which deals with the global dimension of many sports
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/sport/story/0,,2212905,00.html
Slide7: We have already encountered some key features of the globalization of sport;
local or national sports can reach an international or global audience
most sports have a world governing body which standardizes rules and allows teams from different parts of the world to play each other
sport exists in a globally competitive environment: financial security requires globalization
sporting finances may be driven by audiences on the other side of the world
But this is only part of the story … there are also other important dimensions to the globalization of sport
Slide8:
Sport is a central element of global popular culture
and as Andrews and Grainger (2007: 478) point out, the Olympic Movement (202) and FIFA (204) have more members than the UN (191)
Cricket and the Taliban: Cricket and the Taliban Cricket is popular in Afghanistan, and has the backing of the Taliban.
Read the article ‘Afghans unite in passion for cricket’ by Tom Coghlan
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/11/23/wafghan123.xml
Slide10: In 2001 the Taliban sought ICC (International Cricket Council) recognition for cricket in Afghanistan
Afghanistan is now an affiliate member of the ICC
In 2006 its national team completed a first tour of England
Slide11: For the Taliban, cricket is seen as a sport
that is compatible with both its interpretation of Islam and its aspirations for international diplomatic recognition
Cricket was a port of entry into the wider world of international relations (Rumford, 2007)
Slide12: Cricket satisfied the Taliban’s strict interpretation of the Islamic dress code
Mullah Omar decreed that, unlike athletics, football or swimming, playing cricket did not require any part of the body to be revealed to the public
Sport and global consciousness: Sport and global consciousness World Cups promote the ‘compression of the world and the intensification of consciousness of the world as a whole’ (Robertson 2002: 8)
During a World Cup the world becomes a single space of competition within which competitors aim for their team to be the world’s best
Slide14:
But, sport is often seen as a vehicle for nationalism (reinforcing national identification)
The biggest championships are competed for by national teams, or are organized in such a
way that individuals represent their nation-states
‘global spectacles like the
Olympic Games and various World Cups have also thrived on nationalist sentiment’ (Scholte 2000: 163).
Slide15: But does this not mean that globalization promotes nationalism rather than a global identity?
The two are in fact closely related
For sport to become a global phenomenon it has to also become embedded in national contexts
Slide16:
As we saw last term sport is in any case developing in a ‘post-national’ direction;
Premiership clubs have fielded teams containing 11 ‘foreign’ players
the European Super League provides non-national focus
foreign ownership of leading clubs is increasing
teams like Chelsea and Manchester United have become global brands
‘Idealistic internationalism’: ‘Idealistic internationalism’ The modern Olympics were envisioned as international events
staged in a different country every four years
bringing together athletes from many countries
celebrating cultural differences
asserting the formal equality of nations
Thereby proving a context for ‘ideological contest and national self-elevation’ (Lechner and Boli, 2005, p.5)
Slide18: In the view of its founder Baron de Coubertin, the Olympic movement would act as a ‘secular religion capable of binding humanity as a whole’
A balance was struck between national sentiment and ‘pan-human unity’
(Lechner and Boli, 2005, p.3)
Concluding points: Concluding points Sport is a core component of global popular culture – and as such has the ability to connect people in new ways
The institutionalization of sport is an important element of global governance
Sport is an important vehicle for the global development of national identity
Sport of a major vehicle for capitalist accumulation and comodification
Through sport we conceive the world as a single place
References: References Andrews, D. and Grainger, A. 2007: ‘Sport and globalization’ in G. Ritzer (ed) The Blackwell Companion to Globalization. Oxford: Blackwell
Lechner, F. and Boli, J. 2005: World Culture: Origins and Consequences Oxford: Blackwell
Robertson, R 1992: Globalization: Social Theory and Global Culture London: Sage
Rumford, C. 2007: ‘More than a game: globalization and the postwesternization of world cricket’ in R. Giulianotti and R. Robertson (ed) Globalization and Sport. Oxford: Blackwell.
Scholte, J. A. 2000: Globalization: a Critical Introduction Houndmills: Palgrave (esp. Chapter 5)