You Say Soccer, I Say Football
von Edward Patrick Akinyemi
Dies ist der Preis, den Ihre Kunden sehen. Listenpreis bearbeiten
Über das Buch
The world's most popular game seduces millions of people all over the world. But football fans are constantly accused of caring too much about something that is "just a game". Unfortunately, these accusations are probably justified.
They shouldn't care so much. They shouldn't shed all those tears over that last-gasp goal that lost them the championship. They shouldn't become enraged over that missed penalty.
And yet, they do.
You Say Soccer, I Say Football will tell you something that every fan of the game knows deep inside his or her heart. That underneath the surface, there are serious, bigger-picture lessons to be learned through football.
Lessons about life, identity, leadership, mental health, and society. Lessons that encompass psychology, philosophy, politics, racism, and inequality. Lessons that, if only football fans mastered the art of rationally explaining them, would both legitimize this seemingly irrational passion and silence the critics that look down on them because of their obsession.
From the author of Community Heroes: What a Year as an AmeriCorps VISTA Member Taught Me About Community Development and writer and podcast host for the prominent football website Black and White and Read All Over, Akinyemi's latest book You Say Soccer, I Say Football will help you explain why and understand how even though football is just a game, it can teach us invaluable lessons about life and ourselves.
"Deserves a spot on the shelf among your soccer books you’ll loan out (and require the person to return)." -- World Soccer Talk
Eigenschaften und Details
- Hauptkategorie: Sport & Abenteuer
- Weitere Kategorien Sozialwissenschaft, Geschichte
-
Projektoption: 13×20 cm
Seitenanzahl: 310 -
ISBN
- Softcover: 9781715531102
- Veröffentlichungsdatum: Sept. 21, 2020
- Sprache English
- Schlüsselwörter World Cup, World Soccer Talk, Copa America
Über den Autor
A son of Nigerian immigrants, Edward was born and raised in the Netherlands and lived there for 19 years. He has also lived in Spain and Denmark and currently resides in the United States. Due to his perpetual existential (identity) crisis, he has gone by many names: E.P., Ed, Eddy, Eduardo, Edu, and variations of his Nigerian middle names including Chukwueku, Chukwu, Chuks. He even recalls being given, for some inexplicable reason, the nickname of E-dog. Some of these names were voluntarily chosen, others imposed by higher powers, and yet others given by misguided individuals who thought that he was looking for a rapper name. Edward is a former AmeriCorps VISTA member. His experience of being a VISTA taught him valuable lessons about community development and inspired him to write his first book Community Heroes: What a Year as an AmeriCorps VISTA Member Taught Me About Community Development.