Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Authoethnography in the study of football fan culture. Theoretical and methodological reflections by way of football rivarly research

View through CrossRef
Abstract The article reflects on the use of autoethnography in researching football fan culture. It identifies the benefits and challenges of using autoethnography as a strategy and a research method for understanding football fan culture. Despite numerous examples of the use of autoethnography in football research, including supporter studies, it has yet to be considered from a strictly theoretical perspective on the methodological dilemmas of the researcher–football fan. The article critically analyses the entire process of autoethnographic research, which led to the conceptualisation of a research project on perceptions of football competitions. This paper is the result of a clash between a junior scientist’s original research concept and a more experienced ethnographic researcher’s critical approach and reflects the discussion between them. The authors believe that the conclusions reached may be helpful for researchers in the field of humanities and social sciences considering using autoethnography in their research.
Title: Authoethnography in the study of football fan culture. Theoretical and methodological reflections by way of football rivarly research
Description:
Abstract The article reflects on the use of autoethnography in researching football fan culture.
It identifies the benefits and challenges of using autoethnography as a strategy and a research method for understanding football fan culture.
Despite numerous examples of the use of autoethnography in football research, including supporter studies, it has yet to be considered from a strictly theoretical perspective on the methodological dilemmas of the researcher–football fan.
The article critically analyses the entire process of autoethnographic research, which led to the conceptualisation of a research project on perceptions of football competitions.
This paper is the result of a clash between a junior scientist’s original research concept and a more experienced ethnographic researcher’s critical approach and reflects the discussion between them.
The authors believe that the conclusions reached may be helpful for researchers in the field of humanities and social sciences considering using autoethnography in their research.

Related Results

Factors motivating college football fandom and attendance
Factors motivating college football fandom and attendance
The study about college football fandom and attendance trends at the University of Missouri is not entirely groundbreaking but is exploring an academic area still in its relative i...
Becoming a Football Player: Identity Formation on a Women’s Tackle Football Team
Becoming a Football Player: Identity Formation on a Women’s Tackle Football Team
People commonly think of only men playing football. Football, however, has also been played by women for many years. Using a feminist interactionist framework, this study examines ...
A Political History of Football in Iran
A Political History of Football in Iran
In late 1997 Iranian football made international headlines. In an article on the Islamic summit held in Iran, The Economist wrote that almost "anything can become a political footb...
Professional football and local identity in the ‘golden age’: Portsmouth in the mid-twentieth century
Professional football and local identity in the ‘golden age’: Portsmouth in the mid-twentieth century
The idea that professional football clubs and their supporters are material and cultural expressions of the local has assumed axiomatic status in the academic literature without an...
Going home again?
Going home again?
Since its release in 2004, World of Warcraft (WoW) has regularly changed the game and the play experience in significant ways. Recently, Blizzard, the developer of WoW, announced t...
Causal and Corrective Organisational Culture: A Systematic Review of Case Studies of Institutional Failure
Causal and Corrective Organisational Culture: A Systematic Review of Case Studies of Institutional Failure
AbstractOrganisational culture is assumed to be a key factor in large-scale and avoidable institutional failures (e.g. accidents, corruption). Whilst models such as “ethical cultur...
Targeted advertising: documenting the emergence of Gun Culture 2.0 in Guns magazine, 1955–2019
Targeted advertising: documenting the emergence of Gun Culture 2.0 in Guns magazine, 1955–2019
AbstractThis study replicates Yamane, Ivory, and Yamane’s (Gun studies: interdisciplinary approaches to politics, policy, and practice, Routledge, New York, pp. 9–27, 2019) earlier...

Back to Top