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Narratives in Dialogue: Remembering, Experiencing, and Appropriating Changes in the Culture of Australian Rules Football
Elena Balcaite
International Journal of the History of Sport, 2018
In 1990, the Victorian Football League (VFL) became the Australian Football League (AFL) in a symbolic gesture to mark its continuing, although fragmented, national expansion. This com- mercially strategic move solidified the League’s enduring transi- tion from a parochial competition of Melbourne and its suburbia to a clinically managed franchise business with a nationwide reach and an under-surface global ambition. In this paper, the continual yet not strictly linear development of the League is positioned as an interaction and, at times, a tension between locality and globality, from which to reflect on the stories of Billy and Steph – two AFL followers separated by a generation and dif- fering life experiences. The paper chronologizes neither the VFL/ AFL transition nor the two narratives but instead juxtaposes memories and present-day football encounters of the two fans, illuminating creative personal engagements with the League’s perpetually in-flux structures and offering insights into intimate meanings and utilities of community, belonging, and commodity within the AFL spectatorship culture.
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Televised Football Commentaries: Descriptions, narrations and representations of a non-victory
arnaud richard
2008
May, 12th, 1976, in Glasgow, nearly thirty years after the end of the Second World War, two of the most renowned soccer team from France and Germany faced each other in the final of the European clubs championship. International sports events provide great evidence of the way national cultures frame their view of other nationalities. I will seek through various examples to point out links between the operation of media sports discourse and the possible interests of countries as they occur in practice. This is examined through qualitative discourse examples from the transcription of the French television broadcast. Past and present issues of identity politics between France and Germany can be illuminated through this analysis. Attention is paid to whether national stereotyping, I/we images, established/outsider identities/relations were evident in the direct broadcast of this soccer game. I will examine how television has transformed sport as a form of popular culture, focusing on sp...
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The Power of the Local In Sports Broadcasting: a Cross-Cultural Analysis of Rugby Commentary
Fabrice Desmarais
International …, 2009
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The Performance of Sports Commentary: Post-dramatic theatre as a model to examine the performance of the sports commentator
Pete Phillips
2017
This paper uses the languages of contemporary performance to propose a new model for the analysis of sports commentary. Scholarship that has considered the performance of sports commentary, from Bryant, Brown, Comisky & Zillman (1977a, 1977b, 1982) Frederick et al. (2013), and Whannel (1992) all position the role within a dramatic tradition, examining the practice through traditional dramatic structures. Whilst these analyses highlight important features of the dramatic content of sports commentary, the use and frequency of ‘dramatic’ language, the focus on enmity or on particular narrative drives, the dramatic form doesn’t fully account for the performative mechanism of the sports commentator – what the commentator does. The paper proposes the consideration of the performance of sports commentary from a post-dramatic theatre (Lehmann, 2006) tradition inviting new ways of exploring the impact of sports commentary as part of the broadcast spectacle of professional sport. Reframing th...
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Sporting Speech and Communicative Resources in a World Cup Final Loss
Vibrant ABA
VIBRANT, 2009
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TV Sport and Rhetoric The Mediated Event
Preben Raunsbjerg
1998
Most television programmes are not easily categorised into one or another television genre. The borderlines between programme formats are often fluid, and categories tend to overlap. For this reason, many articles and treatises on television start out with a definition of the kind of programme or genre to be discussed. The subject of the present article is televised sport. A good share of the texts on this subject do not address the question of what precisely television sport is, or how this particular kind of television programme or genre differs from other kinds of programmes and genres. Perhaps because what television sport is seems as obvious as the question is banal. For, even if one may often be in doubt as to the genre a given programme belongs to, few if any have trouble deciding whether or not they are watching sport. In fact, characteristic of televised sport is the fact that what passes across the screen seems to proceed so “naturally”, is so self-evident, that it seldom ...
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The Australian sport field: moving and watching
David Rowe
Media International Australia, 2018
The Australian sport field (as in other countries) is powerfully influenced by the media field, and for this reason, the survey on which this article is based placed considerable emphasis on mediated spectatorship. The survey, which draws on and adapts the work of Pierre Bourdieu, revealed differences in the place of sport in the lives of respondents, with a majority never playing it, but an even larger majority watching sport through the media, especially television. Positions within the sport field can, like others, be represented as a set of clusters or divided into quadrants where variable cultural practices; degrees of cultural, educational, social and economic capital; and social characteristics are thrown into sharp relief. This article teases out such differences in relations and practices within the sport field, explores knowledge and taste with regard to playing and watching sport in Australia, and questions the relationship between sport and national culture.
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The Power of Stereotypes: Anchoring Images Through Language In Live Sports Broadcasts
Fabrice Desmarais, Toni Bruce
Journal of Language and Social …, 2010
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Moving closer to the audience: watching football on television
Cornelia Gerhardt
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses, 2006
This article aims to describe specific practices of television spectators based on recordings of English families and friends while watching football on television. Their conversations and the talk and events on television are transcribed and analysed with interactional sociolinguistic and conversation analytical methodologies. By doing 'watching football on television', the spectators constitute themselves as a community of practice. Their strategies include direct address of the television (i.e. the commentator or one of the protagonists of the game) and signalling of independent knowledge and emotions to construct their identities of football fan and expert. Conflict between these two identities may become instantiated in the talk. At times, the spectators mutually negotiate the participant role 'party to the talk at home' for the television. This is done by furnishing second pair parts to the commentators' adjacency pairs. Also, it includes respecting the com...
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European Journal for Sport and Society Football talk: sociological reflections on the dialectics of language and football
roger penn
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