Women's football fandom and stadium attendance in Iran: a form of everyday resistance?

被引:0
作者
Phipps, Catherine [1 ]
Afrouzeh, Ali [2 ]
Pope, Stacey [3 ]
Pourkiani, Mohammad [2 ]
Boroumand, Mohammad Reza [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Chichester, Business Sch, Chichester, England
[2] Shahid Beheshti Univ, Fac Sport Sci & Hlth, Tehran, Iran
[3] Univ Durham, Dept Sport & Exercise Sci, Durham, England
关键词
Football fandom; gender; identity; everyday resistance; Iran; stadiums; IDENTITIES; INTERVIEWS; TELEPHONE; FANS;
D O I
10.1080/16078055.2024.2406487
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
To date, there is a scarcity of research examining women's leisure lives in Iran, particularly their football fandom. In this study, we examine the development and negotiation of women's fan identities, their experience of stadium attendance and alternative forms of fandom, as well as the extent to which their fandom is a form of everyday resistance. To do so, we draw on semi-structured interview data with ten women who attended matches at Azadi Stadium in Tehran. Utilizing identity theory and concepts of everyday resistance, we found women have highly salient fan identities, developed through various forms of fandom. This is despite gender and other factors such as geographical location acting as identity constraints. Due to historic restrictions in women attending stadiums, interviewees used alternative fandom as types of everyday resistance, opposing gender norms in subtle ways. Moreover, stadium attendance in itself symbolizes everyday resistance for women, a means to challenge others' opposition to their fandom, and resist cultural expectations including ideas about "appropriate" gender norms. The significance of this article is demonstrated by the potential for women's football fandom to contest gender inequality in Iranian society and we suggest it is both a form of activism and a leisure activity.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 38 条
[21]   State Control and the Online Contestation of Iranian Female Spectators and Activists [J].
Mohammadi, Shahrzad .
COMMUNICATION & SPORT, 2020, 8 (4-5) :651-667
[22]   Is there a bias against telephone interviews in qualitative research? [J].
Novick, Gina .
RESEARCH IN NURSING & HEALTH, 2008, 31 (04) :391-398
[23]   Sampling Knowledge: The Hermeneutics of Snowball Sampling in Qualitative Research [J].
Noy, Chaim .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY, 2008, 11 (04) :327-344
[24]   Fair to Swear?: Gendered Formulations of Fairness in Football in Turkey [J].
Nuhrat, Yagmur .
JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST WOMENS STUDIES, 2017, 13 (01) :25-46
[25]  
Open Stadiums, 2018, Iranian women demanded 'open stadiums' for a long time.
[26]  
Phipps C., 2022, International Journal of Spa and Wellness, V5, P91, DOI [https://doi.org/10.1080/24721735.2021.1991649, DOI 10.1080/24721735.2021.1991649]
[27]  
Pope S, 2017, ROUTL RES SPORT CULT
[28]   When face-to-face interviews are not possible: tips and tricks for video, telephone, online chat, and email interviews in qualitative research [J].
Saarijarvi, Markus ;
Bratt, Ewa-Lena .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR NURSING, 2021, 20 (04) :392-396
[29]  
Scott J.C., 1989, COPENHAGEN J ASIAN S, V4, P33, DOI [10.22439/cjas.v4i1.1765, DOI 10.22439/CJAS.V4I1.1765]
[30]  
Scott James C., 1985, WEAPONS WEAK EVERYDA