Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Football, Place, and Community in a New Zealand Mining Town, 1877–1939

2017; Routledge; Volume: 34; Issue: 10 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/09523367.2017.1408588

ISSN

1743-9035

Autores

Charles Little,

Tópico(s)

Sports, Gender, and Society

Resumo

Resource towns (such as lumber camps, power plants, and mining towns) are by their very nature peripheral. They frequently exist in a space of isolation, not only geographically but also culturally as well. The South Island mining town of Kaitangata is a classic example of this process – an industrial, working class, and heavily migrant community positioned within an otherwise agricultural, conservation, and homogenous tract of rural New Zealand. Kaitangata, in the words of one writer, ‘possessed a unique character and pattern of social interaction’ that marked it out from its immediate environment. One way in which these differences manifested themselves was in the sporting activities of the town. In a part of the world where rugby union held absolute hegemony, the town broke the mould by also fielding teams in association football, rugby league, and even Australian Rules football (distinguishing itself as the only town outside of the provincial capital of Dunedin where these three sports obtained a foothold). This paper analyses how these sporting activities contributed to a unique sense of space, addressing themes including class, ethnicity, masculinity, and identity.

Referência(s)