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‘Arsenal/Diósgyőr Till I Die’ A Comparison of English and Hungarian Football Fan Culture Based on Nick Hornby’s Fever Pitch and Anthropological Fieldwork.

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Presentation on theme: "‘Arsenal/Diósgyőr Till I Die’ A Comparison of English and Hungarian Football Fan Culture Based on Nick Hornby’s Fever Pitch and Anthropological Fieldwork."— Presentation transcript:

1 ‘Arsenal/Diósgyőr Till I Die’ A Comparison of English and Hungarian Football Fan Culture Based on Nick Hornby’s Fever Pitch and Anthropological Fieldwork Németh Máté

2 Subjects of the analysis Comparison of the football fan culture of England and Hungary in general, and the features of the supporters of Arsenal FC and Diósgyőri VTK based on Fever Pitch written by Nick Hornby and on own fieldwork done with fan groups of DVTK The examination of the identifying practices and culture- specific characteristics of the two groups Analysis of the effect of hooligans and ultras on the atmosphere surrounding football matches

3 Similarities between the two clubs Social features of the district of Highbury and region of Miskolc History and present form of the football teams Social features and enthusiasm of the supporters Status inside their own country

4 Methods of the research qualitative and quantitative academic research tehniques: -Participant observation, structured and semi-structured interviews with supporters Social movements: „ultra” groups ‚hooligan’ groups  England is the home of this subcultural movement The two movements cannot be separated in the case of Hungarian football supporters

5 General features of Arsenal and English supporters between 1968 and 1992 football hooliganism is extremely popular they usually form groups and these are called firms chant fan songs and show their scarves as an identifying practice they prefer punk music and wear leather jackets

6 General features of DVTK and Hungarian supporters hooligan and ultra groups are not separated but clashes are not so common creating flags and hangings, planning choreographies are really popular fan groups usually call themselves brigades fan groups organize the jitter, supporters from other sectors follow them

7 Spatial situation inside the stadiums Arsenal North Bank: covered terrace, no seats East Stand: no seats mainly younger supporters, more dangerous Clock End: usually away fans, who had frequently been attacked by fans from East Stand West Stand: not seated

8 Spatial situation inside the stadiums DVTK A-J: ‘Sunny Side’ The most socially heterogeneous sector Tribune: elder season-ticket holders X,Y,Z stands: Y used to be the sector of fan groups U, V, W stands: sector of children and senior citizens N, O, P stands: sectors of away teams K, L, M: former ‘Bosch sector’ I, J, J1: new ‘Bosch sector’

9 Football hooliganism Golden years in England: 1970s and 1980s Major catastrophes related to English fans: – Heysel Stadium, Brussels, Belgium in 1985 – Hillsborough Stadium, Sheffield, Great Britain in 1989 Hungarian football hooliganism: – Biggest clashes from the early 1990s to 2004,2005 Famous attacks of Diósgyőr fans: – FTC, 2011 – Újpest, 2012

10 Against modern football supporters think football has been commercialized and has lost its traditions the purpose of the safety measurements is just about making this game more profitable they think associations and authorities are against football supporters

11 Thank You for Your Attention!


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