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Mediatization and sport: a bottom-up perspective

Mediatization and sport: a bottom-up perspective
Mediatization and sport: a bottom-up perspective
The concept of mediatization has proved remarkably popular in the past decade, although recent critiques have challenged its media-centrism, ahistoricism, and conceptual clarity. In this article, we draw on the work of those who suggest that mediatization is best deployed as a means of understanding particular social domains and the ways in which institutions and actors orientate their activities towards media. Using association football, or soccer, as our focus we offer a bottom-up perspective using data gathered from research workshops with young people in England. These not only demonstrate the extent to which football is followed through a range of media platforms but also how broader understandings of the game are shaped by these engagements. Moreover, we adapt insights from recent phenomenological approaches to media to focus on the practical, embodied forms of knowledge and habit that shape how football is currently played, followed, and debated.
2167-4795
588-604
Skey, Michael
d4946f2a-9133-4bd7-aef0-b18a228fb00f
Stone, Chris
93ff5e85-3655-46b1-b422-4247df18f03b
Jenzen, Olu
ea2f2c5f-197f-4595-8f38-0548817bf25b
Mangan, Anita
5bf11e7f-356d-4ed9-8916-8d5cb94cbeeb
Skey, Michael
d4946f2a-9133-4bd7-aef0-b18a228fb00f
Stone, Chris
93ff5e85-3655-46b1-b422-4247df18f03b
Jenzen, Olu
ea2f2c5f-197f-4595-8f38-0548817bf25b
Mangan, Anita
5bf11e7f-356d-4ed9-8916-8d5cb94cbeeb

Skey, Michael, Stone, Chris, Jenzen, Olu and Mangan, Anita (2018) Mediatization and sport: a bottom-up perspective. Communication & Sport, 6 (5), 588-604. (doi:10.1177/2167479517734850).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The concept of mediatization has proved remarkably popular in the past decade, although recent critiques have challenged its media-centrism, ahistoricism, and conceptual clarity. In this article, we draw on the work of those who suggest that mediatization is best deployed as a means of understanding particular social domains and the ways in which institutions and actors orientate their activities towards media. Using association football, or soccer, as our focus we offer a bottom-up perspective using data gathered from research workshops with young people in England. These not only demonstrate the extent to which football is followed through a range of media platforms but also how broader understandings of the game are shaped by these engagements. Moreover, we adapt insights from recent phenomenological approaches to media to focus on the practical, embodied forms of knowledge and habit that shape how football is currently played, followed, and debated.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 1 November 2017
Published date: 1 October 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488641
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488641
ISSN: 2167-4795
PURE UUID: ba00efb6-c9ea-43f3-962b-572fa56530b2

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2024 18:00
Last modified: 09 Apr 2024 09:54

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Contributors

Author: Michael Skey
Author: Chris Stone
Author: Olu Jenzen
Author: Anita Mangan

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