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Football Hooligans: Knowing the Score (Explorations in Anthropology)
 
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Football Hooligans: Knowing the Score (Explorations in Anthropology) [Paperback]

Gary Armstrong (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Explorations in Anthropology October 1, 2003
This book examines how groups of young male fans come to be defined and identified as football `hooligans’ and challenges the assumption that violence is wholly central to the match-day experience for these supporters. Rather, the creation of identity is at the root of hooliganism, with all the cultural values and rituals, codes of honour and shame, and communal patterns of behaviour and consumption that accompany it. The author locates hooliganism historically within the milieu of an industrial working class culture and examines ideas of performance and ritual encompassed in idealized masculinity.

The book is based on a decade’s in-depth study of the `Blades’, a group of football fans supporting Sheffield United, who are notorious for their hooliganism. It contributes to the debate on football hooliganism by challenging many traditionally-held notions of hooliganism and by providing the first anthropological study of football violence.

The book also debunks the myth that violence between football fans is organized by `generals’ operating within hierarchically structured groups. Falsehoods such as this, it is argued, are advanced to augment the powers of the police and media in redefining and controlling particular groups of individuals whose behaviour does not fit easily within increasingly constrictive codes of social conduct.

This book represents essential reading not only for undergraduates of social anthropology, sociology and criminology but also for the general reader with an interest in football culture.

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Hooligan Wars: Causes and Effects of Football Violence (Mainstream Sport) $16.99

Football Hooligans: Knowing the Score (Explorations in Anthropology) + Hooligan Wars: Causes and Effects of Football Violence (Mainstream Sport)


Editorial Reviews

Review

"This is an intelligently-argued book. If you thought football stands were full of middle-class Hornby-ites congratulating each other on their second car and their commuter-belt homes, then think again. Armstrong makes it clear that hooliganism is still going strong." --Total Football

"An intelligently-argued book." --Planet Football

"[Armstrong's] conclusions synthesize and expand other explanations; the result is a more holistic, informed interpretation.. . . The monograph's selection for a Guggenheim Foundation Award for Studies on Aggression and Violence attests to its thoroughness and the importance of this perspective. The descriptions and analysis are skilfully crafted. Armstrong's blending of empirical data and theoretical interpretations raise the debate on hooliganism and will provoke further study." --International Review for the Sociology of Sports

"Armstrong is fascinating on the games-playing and ritualistic nature of hooligan confrontations... There's a huge amount of interesting material... Armstrong has a clean, clear style." --The Independent

"Should become a much-quoted reference within contemporary ethnographic work. For sociologists of sport the book is essential, particularly in view of the growing importance of ethnographic research within this sub-field of sociology. [...] Football Hooligans is an important book. It provides a very readable account of the football hooligan subculture that will have an appeal beyond academia." --Culture, Sport, Society

"A refreshing effort to account for an important social movement with straightforward language and reasoning. . . The methodology, the important if unfamiliar content, and overall sound approach make the book significant for American readers." --Choice

"There's a great book out now called Football Hooligans: Knowing the Score by Gary Armstrong. I tend to run a mile from academics who write on that subject, but this one was recommended to me by an authority and it's head and shoulders above the rest. It's refreshingly free from the middle-class moralising and patronising attitude towards the hoolies that permeates most of those studies. Most of all, it has no social control agenda and it deconstructs a lot of the bullshit about football firms which has developed as theory. I recommend it strongly." --Irvine Welsh, author of Trainspotting

"What lifts [Football Hooligans] out of the ordinary is Armstrong's writing style which . . . . is lucid, unsensational, and mercifully free of that combination of glee and fevered self-justification which is a traditional feature when such accounts are penned by the (now reformed) participants." --Harry Pearson, When Saturday Comes

"A fascinating read. . . .Armstrong is fascinating on the games-playing and ritualistic nature of hooligan confrontations.. . . Hooligans used to like a bit of attention, a record of their brave deeds. In Armstrong, one crew, at least, found their very own anthropologist, the Boswell of the Blades." -- Chris Maume, The Independent

"This book makes important contributions not only to an emerging anthropology of sport but to the discipline as a whole." --Social Anthropology

"Of particular inerest to people involved with Sheffield United or the study of football hooliganism ....debunks the myth....that football hooliganism is organised and orchestrated by 'generals'." --Flashing Blade

"A must for those interested in working-class male culture, football, and of course hooliganism." --American Anthropologist

"A rarity in that it caters both for the general and the specialist reader, and, perhaps more important, is a clear labour of love ... It is a well-researched, well-written volume." --Times Higher Education Supplement

About the Author

Gary Armstrong is a Lecturer, i n the Department of Sport Science, at Brunel University.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Berg Publishers; 1st edition (October 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1859739571
  • ISBN-13: 978-1859739570
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,456,086 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Popular Anthropology, April 28, 1999
This review is from: Football Hooligans: Knowing the Score (Explorations in Anthropology) (Paperback)
This outstanding ethnographic study of one particular group of football hooligans--the "Blades" who follow Sheffield United--challenges and dismisses many of the popular conceptions about hooliganism. Based on the author's 15 or so years of following Sheffield United and hanging out with those he is examining, the book is a fairly academic one, brimming with sociology jargon and theory (none of it too distracting or demanding for the lay reader). A few key themes emerge: (1) The Blades are not organized in any way, they are a self-selected amorphous group with members coming and going of their own accord, and being involved at a self-decided level (ranging from "core" to "peripheral." (2) There are no leaders who organize Blade hooligan activity. Buses to away games may be organized, and some "Top Lads" may yell suggestions in the heat of a situation, but no one bears--or wants--a leadership mantle. (3) There is no element of racism, about 10% of the Blades are black. Blades involved with the National Front or British National Party are peripherals who are derided for their views. (4) The media generally get the facts all wrong (either from laziness or police misinformation) or intentionally distort the facts about hooligan incidents, oftentimes mislabeling non-football related episodes as hooligan events. Also, the police are generally effective in limiting hooligan on hooligan violence, but often wrongfully arrest Blades and manufacture charges. This is hardly surprising, but the frequency outlined in the study is somewhat disconcerting. (5) The level of violence as measured by actual punches, injuries (minor and major) is exceedingly minimal and is self-restrained by various unspoken "rules" and "norms" within the ritual of behavior. Most all violence occurs away from the match, either before or after or en route, and is never targeted at non-hooligans. This is a key theme, and an important one, considering the popular perception of what hooligan violence involves. The overall impression that emerges is that the effects of hooliganism are totally overhyped by media, police, and public for their own aims. The caveat is that this study was limited to one group in one city. One suspects that a similarly rigorous and long-running study of, say, Chelsea, or West Ham, would find a much more disturbing set of lads and incidents. For participant accounts, see "Capital Punishment: London's Violent Football Following" by Dougie and Eddy Brimson and for an excellent work of fiction see "The Football Factory" by John King.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Blades Vs. Pigs Sheffeild's Inter-City rivalries revealed, June 10, 2003
By 
TZ2000Rocker "GO MENTAL UNITED" (Lost Angeles(We've a new stadium!)) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Football Hooligans: Knowing the Score (Explorations in Anthropology) (Paperback)
I cannot beleive the amount of literature thats been written about Football hoolies these days. The thing that makes this one stand out the most is that it is written from a sociological perspective, rather than from the horse's mouth. it really is a good read nevertheless!
Of course there are better works!
If you can't find any hoolie books on the US site, try amazon.co.uk-if you don't mind the cost of shipping...
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3 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the best in the world of hooliganism, March 25, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Football Hooligans: Knowing the Score (Explorations in Anthropology) (Paperback)
It explain the birth of the infamous hooligans. It a good book, bacause it has a good description of what the hooligans are doing to the sport.
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