Arab Soccer in a Jewish State
Over the last two decades soccer has become a major institution within the popular culture of the Arab-Palestinian citizens of Israel. They have attained disproportionate success in this field. Given their marginalisation from many areas of Israeli society as well as the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict, such a prominent Arab presence highlights the tension between their Israeli citizenship and their belonging to the Palestinian people. Bringing together sociological, anthropological and historical approaches, Sorek examines how soccer can potentially be utilised by ethnic and national minorities as a field of social protest, a stage for demonstrating distinctive identity, or as a channel for social and political integration. Relying on a rich combination of quantitative and qualitative methods, he argues that equality in the soccer sphere legitimises contemporary inequality between Jews and Arabs in Israel and pursues wider arguments about the role of sport in ethno-national conflicts. Ideal for researchers and graduate students.
- A contribution to the study of ethnicity and nationalism, as well as the sociology of sport
- Combines sociological, anthropological and historical approaches and methods
- Will appeal to social scientists with an interest in culture, politics, ethnicity and nationalism, and humanities scholars with an interest in culture in the modern Middle East
Reviews & endorsements
"This is a surprising story of the only sphere in which Arab-Israeli relations do not seem to be in crisis. Sorek has written a subtle and apparently non-partisan account of the lace of Arabs in the Jewish state. Thanks to its refreshingly clear prose, this book should have an appeal beyond specialists in the field." - Simon Kuper, author of Football Against the Enemy
"Sorek's style and construction of arguments are engaging and accessible, and the book provides an excellent introduction to soccer in Israel.... It will become recommended reading to students and scholars interested in both the specific topic of Israel and the broader relationship between soccer and society." - Daniel Burdsey, University of Brighton, American Journal of Sociolgy
"The book is valuable when viewing Arab-Israeli relationships because it give us a shining example of one success.... we should be happy that at least one, albeit limited, area of the subject has been explored extensively." - Middle East Quarterly
Product details
July 2007Hardback
9780521870481
242 pages
229 × 152 × 17 mm
0.53kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Sports, modernity and struggle in Palestine
- 3. The emergence of the integrative enclave
- 4. Soccer and municipal 'labor quiet'
- 5. 'These points are Arab': nationalist rhetoric in the sports press
- 6. 'Maccabi Haifa is my flag': Arab fans of Jewish teams
- 7. The Islamic soccer league
- 8. Sakhnin - between soccer and martyrdom
- 9. Conclusion.