Sport, Politics, and Society in the Middle East
DANYEL REICHE AND TAMIR SOREK
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 2019
July
29, 2020 James M. Dorsey
Sports
scholars Danyel Reiche and Tamir Sorek’s edited volume, Sport, Politics, and Society in the Middle East (Oxford
University Press, 2019), makes a significant contribution to what remains a
largely understudied, yet critically important segment of Middle Eastern
political and social life. It does so by discussing in eleven chapters multiple
aspects and consequences of the region’s incestuous relationship between sports
and politics. These range from corruption, the role of the private sector, an
emphasis on elite sports and projection of the state at the expense of
grassroots sports to battles for identity expressed among others in memories to
how sports chants in Israel reflect society’s political and social moods as
well as it fault lines, the struggle of women to overcome deeply entrenched
social modes and how social media helps them with branding. The edited volume is
not only an at times ethnographic dive into Middle Eastern sports’ multiple
facets but also in many ways a mapping of how much remains to be explored. This
is a volume that should attract the attention of anyone who is interested in
the Middle East, sports and/or gender issues as well as readers whose focus is
a specific country like Turkey, Israel, Palestine or Jordan or a group of
nations like the Gulf states. Whatever one’s preference is, Reiche and Sorek
have produced a volume rich in texture, insight and breadth that is likely to
prompt the reader to think differently about the political and societal
importance of Middle Eastern sports.
Listen
to the podcast at https://newbooksnetwork.com/danyel-reiche-and-tamir-sorek-sport-politics-and-society-in-the-middle-east-oxford-up-2019/
Dr.
James M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore. He is also a senior research fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute and co-director of the University of
Wuerzburg’s Institute of Fan Culture in Germany.
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