ABSTRACT

This is the first book to explore the full significance of sport fans and fandom from an international and interdisciplinary perspective, across different sports, communities and levels of engagement. It gives a comprehensive overview of the undeniable economic and cultural influence of sport industries for which fans are the driving force.  

The book examines different theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of fans, including typologies of fandom, and presents cutting-edge discussion across broad thematic areas such as performance and identity, the business of fandom, and fandom and media. It considers the experiences of diverse and marginalized fan groups, with an emphasis on intersectional analysis, and shines new light on key contemporary themes such as fan activism, violence and deviance, mobility and migration, and the transformative effects of digital and social media. This volume includes chapters by many of the leading scholars responsible for having laid the foundation for sport fan research as well as early-career scholars who examine the newest developments in media technologies, legalized betting, gaming, and fantasy sports. 

Including perspectives from disciplines such as philosophy, sociology, psychology, management, economics, and media studies, this book is essential reading for anybody interested in the study of sport and wider society or fans and subcultures more broadly.

part I|124 pages

What Is a Fan and How Do We Know?

chapter 2|12 pages

Imagining the Citizen-Fan

Sport Metaphor in American Politics and Implications for Democratic Culture

chapter 4|12 pages

Experiences of Female Fans in a Female-Defined Sport

Central, Valued and Visible

chapter 9|12 pages

Media Coverage of Sports Fans

A Framing Analysis

chapter 10|9 pages

Rebounding as Praxis

Interrogating Positionality and Proximity in Sporting Fieldwork

chapter 11|9 pages

Should We Admire Athletes?

chapter 12|6 pages

Centering Race in Sport Fan Research

A Call to Action

part II|128 pages

Who Fans Are

chapter 13|12 pages

Sport Fandom

The Complexity of Performative Role Identities

chapter 16|12 pages

The Olympics Sports Fan

A Distinctive Demographic

chapter 17|12 pages

Para Sport Fandom

Fans and Followers of Paralympians

chapter 18|12 pages

English Football, Sexuality, and Homophobia

Gay Fans' Perspectives on Governance and Visibility

chapter 19|21 pages

Photography, Autoethnography and Mapping Sporting Transformations

A Discussion of Stuart Roy Clarke's Work on British Football

chapter 20|13 pages

The Ecosystem of Football Supporter Groups in Brazil

Traditions, Innovation and Hybridity

chapter 22|10 pages

Engaging the Non-Local Sport Fan

part III|142 pages

What Fans Do

chapter 24|12 pages

Online Performances of Fandom

Selective Self-Presentation, Perceived Affordances, and Parasocial Interactions on Social Media

chapter 27|11 pages

Understanding Sport Videogames

The Extensions of Fan

chapter 28|12 pages

Sports Fans Hunt for Women's Games

Beyond News Media Coverage

chapter 29|14 pages

Twitter Discourse in the Southeaster Conference

The Nick Saban Effect

chapter 30|12 pages

Football Fan Reactions to Video Assistant Referee

No More Hand of God

chapter 31|11 pages

Reconfiguring Transnational Fan Experience Through Digital Media

European Football in China

chapter 32|12 pages

The Commodification and Mediatization of Fandom

Creating Executive Fandom

chapter 33|11 pages

Football Fans and Food

Feeding the Desire

chapter 34|13 pages

Fan Reactions to Athlete Activism

“Stick to Sports”