Non-elite conceptions of Europe: Europe as reference frame in English football fan discussions

Discursive approaches to Europe usually focus on elite discourses and target a narrow political understanding of Europe. Against the backdrop of rising Euroscepticism and the known elite-mass divide on issues of European identity, it seems important to shift the focus toward non-elite discourses on...

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Main Authors: Regina Weber, Alexander Brand, Arne Niemann, Florian Koch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UACES 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary European Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/1089
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spelling doaj-4162b29c97f04df4a5aab3e729be801f2021-02-02T11:53:52ZengUACESJournal of Contemporary European Research1815-347X2020-12-0116310.30950/jcer.v16i3.1089Non-elite conceptions of Europe: Europe as reference frame in English football fan discussionsRegina WeberAlexander BrandArne NiemannFlorian Koch Discursive approaches to Europe usually focus on elite discourses and target a narrow political understanding of Europe. Against the backdrop of rising Euroscepticism and the known elite-mass divide on issues of European identity, it seems important to shift the focus toward non-elite discourses on Europe. Given that club football is largely Europeanised (player markets, continent-wide club competitions and broadcasting of matches), we analyse how fans of the English Premier League club Manchester United discursively construct ‘Europe’ in relation to their sport. Our main research question aims at identifying how identifications of fans have been unconsciously Europeanised in the wake of an ongoing Europeanisation of the game. We explore online discourses on rivalry, competition and player transfers in club football as these areas are strongly influenced by the interplay of national and European inclinations. Preliminary results of our qualitative content analysis demonstrate that Manchester United fans, inasmuch as their club ‘goes Europe’ on a frequent basis, have developed transnational perspectives on football. Distinctions between ‘us’ and ‘them’ are not predominantly based on nationality, even though they remain complex. However, European orientations (not the European Union as such) seem to play more of a prominent role than commonly assumed. https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/1089EuropeanisationEuropean identityfootballlifeworldEngland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Regina Weber
Alexander Brand
Arne Niemann
Florian Koch
spellingShingle Regina Weber
Alexander Brand
Arne Niemann
Florian Koch
Non-elite conceptions of Europe: Europe as reference frame in English football fan discussions
Journal of Contemporary European Research
Europeanisation
European identity
football
lifeworld
England
author_facet Regina Weber
Alexander Brand
Arne Niemann
Florian Koch
author_sort Regina Weber
title Non-elite conceptions of Europe: Europe as reference frame in English football fan discussions
title_short Non-elite conceptions of Europe: Europe as reference frame in English football fan discussions
title_full Non-elite conceptions of Europe: Europe as reference frame in English football fan discussions
title_fullStr Non-elite conceptions of Europe: Europe as reference frame in English football fan discussions
title_full_unstemmed Non-elite conceptions of Europe: Europe as reference frame in English football fan discussions
title_sort non-elite conceptions of europe: europe as reference frame in english football fan discussions
publisher UACES
series Journal of Contemporary European Research
issn 1815-347X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Discursive approaches to Europe usually focus on elite discourses and target a narrow political understanding of Europe. Against the backdrop of rising Euroscepticism and the known elite-mass divide on issues of European identity, it seems important to shift the focus toward non-elite discourses on Europe. Given that club football is largely Europeanised (player markets, continent-wide club competitions and broadcasting of matches), we analyse how fans of the English Premier League club Manchester United discursively construct ‘Europe’ in relation to their sport. Our main research question aims at identifying how identifications of fans have been unconsciously Europeanised in the wake of an ongoing Europeanisation of the game. We explore online discourses on rivalry, competition and player transfers in club football as these areas are strongly influenced by the interplay of national and European inclinations. Preliminary results of our qualitative content analysis demonstrate that Manchester United fans, inasmuch as their club ‘goes Europe’ on a frequent basis, have developed transnational perspectives on football. Distinctions between ‘us’ and ‘them’ are not predominantly based on nationality, even though they remain complex. However, European orientations (not the European Union as such) seem to play more of a prominent role than commonly assumed.
topic Europeanisation
European identity
football
lifeworld
England
url https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/1089
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