Shifting European identities, cultural loyalties and divisions are often expressed more directly through attitudes to 'the people's game' game than in any other arena.
This book examines European football journalism from throughout the last century to present a unique cross-cultural analysis of changing European national and regional identities.
Building on detailed research into original language sources from across Western Europe, from the early 20thcentury to the present day, Football and European Identitytraces this fascinating evolution.
The resulting cross-cultural analysis of national identity in Europe provides the basis for a unique study of the interplay between football, society, politics and the print media, in three parts:
Part 1: Old Europenational identity in the football writing of England, France, Germany, Italy and Spain
Part 2: Nations within a Stateexamines the status of Corsican, Catalonian and Basque identities
Part 3: New (Football) Worldsexplores the response of Europes presses to the emergence of Africa, South East Asia and the USA as major forces in world football