Photography, autoethnography and mapping sporting transformations : a discussion of Stuart Roy Clarke's work on British football

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Fotografie, Autoethnographie und die Aufzeichnung von Sporttransformationen : eine Diskussion der Arbeit von Roy Clarke über den Fußball in Großbritannien
Autor:Williams, John
Erschienen in:Routledge handbook of sport fans and fandom
Veröffentlicht:London: Routledge (Verlag), 2022, [21 S.], Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Sammelwerksbeitrag
Medienart: Elektronische Ressource (online) Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
DOI:10.4324/9780429342189-21
Schlagworte:
Fan
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Erfassungsnummer:PU202210007239
Quelle:BISp
TY  - COLL
AU  - Williams, John
A2  - Williams, John
DB  - BISp
DP  - BISp
KW  - Dokumentation
KW  - Entwicklung, geschichtliche
KW  - Erfahrung
KW  - Ethnographie
KW  - Fan
KW  - Fankultur
KW  - Fußballspiel
KW  - Geschichtsschreibung
KW  - Großbritannien
KW  - Kulturgeschichte
KW  - Mannschaft
KW  - Modernisierung
KW  - Organisationsstruktur
KW  - Profisport
KW  - Sportentwicklung
KW  - Sportfotografie
KW  - Sportkultur
KW  - Sportsoziologie
KW  - Transformation
KW  - Wandel, sozialer
LA  - eng
PB  - Routledge
CY  - London
TI  - Photography, autoethnography and mapping sporting transformations : a discussion of Stuart Roy Clarke's work on British football
TT  - Fotografie, Autoethnographie und die Aufzeichnung von Sporttransformationen : eine Diskussion der Arbeit von Roy Clarke über den Fußball in Großbritannien
PY  - 2022
N2  - Using autoethnography, this chapter charts my career as a fan of Liverpool Football Club and, as a colleague and friend, my relationship with the football photographer Stuart Roy Clarke. I try to analyse here how and why these two significant experiences interconnect. I firstly describe my life as a fan-scholar during a period when English football was undergoing transformative change in the early 1990s with the arrival of the Premier League, a new global construct with strong local roots, but funded by, and produced for, television. I have spent much of my academic career writing about this transformative change and its social and cultural impact. Meanwhile, Stuart Roy Clarke was recording, through photography, aspects of the same process, but by bringing an artist’s eye and vernacular to expressing what is worth conserving about ‘old’ football in Britain and the homes that staged it, but also what is appreciative and valuable about its forced modernisation. I argue for the importance of photography in this context. We have worked fruitfully together since, and in a recent book we try to combine some sociological analysis with his extraordinary photographs to provide an accessible popular history of the game in Britain.
L2  - https://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429342189-21
DO  - 10.4324/9780429342189-21
SP  - [21 S.]
BT  - Routledge handbook of sport fans and fandom
M3  - Elektronische Ressource (online)
M3  - Gedruckte Ressource
ID  - PU202210007239
ER  -