Abstract
While studies of rhetoric and discourse have recently embraced a turn to “field methods,” studies of sport discourse have remained reliant on textual or mediated artifacts. In an effort to help shift focus to other methods, this chapter leverages the authors’ experiences “being there” for the 2019 FIFA World Cup to ask what the women’s soccer World Cup meant on social, cultural, and rhetorical levels. Specifically, this chapter provides alternating narratives from a diverse set of experiences that provide in-depth assessment of the impact and complexity of FIFA World Cup 2019. Through this chapter, the authors hope to demonstrate the value of emplaced, embodied, critical rhetorical analysis of sport, with particular attention to queer and feminist resistance in fan spaces of FIFA World Cup 2019.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Ahmed, S. (2006). Queer phenomenology: Orientations, objects, others. Duke University Press.
Billings, A. C., Angelini, J. R., MacArthur, P. J., Bissell, K., Smith, L. R., & Brown, N. A. (2014). Where the gender differences really reside: The “big five” sports featured in NBC’s 2012 London primetime Olympic broadcast. Communication Research Reports, 31(2), 141–153.
Blair, C. (1999). Contemporary U.S. memorial sites as exemplars of rhetoric’s materiality. In J. Seltzer & S. Crowley (Eds.), Rhetorical bodies: Toward a material rhetoric (pp. 16–57). University of Wisconsin Press.
Blair, C. (2001). Reflections on criticism and bodies: Parables from public places. Western Journal of Communication, 65(3), 271–294.
Borer, M. I. (2008). Faithful to Fenway: Believing in Boston, baseball, and America’s most beloved ballpark. NYU Press.
Butler, S., & BIssell, K. (2015). Olympic effort: Disability, culture, and resistance in the 2012 London Olympic Games. Journalism & Communication Monographs, 17(4), 228–273.
Caldwell, J. (2006). Sport, sexualities and queer/theory. Routledge.
Campbell, K. K. (1989). Man cannot speak for her (Vol. I and II). Praeger.
Chávez, K. R. (2011). Counter-public enclaves and understanding the function of rhetoric in social movement coalition-building. Communication Quarterly, 59(1), 118.
Cooky, C., Messner, M. A., & Hextrum, R. H. (2013). Women play sport, but not on TV: A longitudinal study of televised news media. Communication & Sport, 1(3), 203–230.
Dadas, C. (2016). Messy methods: Queer methodological approaches to researching social media. Computers and Composition, 40, 60–72.
Dickinson, G., & Aiello, G. (2016). Urban communication| Being through there matters: Materiality, bodies, and movement in urban communication research. International Journal of Communication, 10(15), 1294–1308.
Dickinson, G., Blair, C., & Ott, B. L. (2010). Places of public memory: Rhetoric of museums and memorials. University of Alabama Press.
Grabill, J. T., Leon, K., & Pigg, S. (2018). Fieldwork and the identification and assembling of agencies. In C. Rai & C. G. Drushke (Eds.), Field rhetoric: Ethnography, ecology, and engagement in the places of persuasion (pp. 193–212).
Grano, D. A. (2017). The eternal Present of sport: Rethinking sport and religion. Temple Univ Press.
Longman, J. (2019, June 23). For Spain, investment pays off at the World Cup. The New York Times. Retrieved August 6, 2020 from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/23/sports/womens-world-cup-spain.html
Middleton, M., Hess, A., Endres, D., & Senda-Cook, S. (2015). Participatory critical rhetoric: Theoretical and methodological foundations for studying rhetoric in Situ. Lexington Books.
Middleton, M., Senda-Cook, S., & Endres, D. (2011). Articulating rhetorical field methods: Challenges and tensions. Western Journal of Communication, 75(4), 386–406.
Pezzullo, P., & Hauser, G. A. (2018). Afterword: Traveling worlds to engage rhetoric’s perennial questions. In C. Rai & C. G. Drushke (Eds.), Field rhetoric: Ethnography, ecology, and engagement in the places of persuasion (pp. 253–264). University of Alabama Press.
Pezzullo, P. C., & de Onís, C. M. (2018). Rethinking rhetorical field methods on a precarious planet. Communication Monographs, 85(1), 103–122.
Pezzulo, P. C. (2003). Touring “Cancer Alley,” Louisiana: Performances of community and memory for environmental justice. Text and Performance Quarterly, 23(3), 226–252.
Rai, C. & Druschke C. G. (2018). Field rhetoric: Ethnography, ecology, and engagement in the places of persuasion. University of Alabama Press.
Ramshaw, G., & Gammon, S. (2005). More than just nostalgia? Exploring the heritage/sport tourism Nexus. Journal of Sport & Tourism, 10(4), 229–241.
Shugart, H. A. (2003). She shoots, she scores: Mediated constructions of contemporary female athletes in coverage of the 1999 US women’s soccer team. Western Journal of Communication, 67(1), 1–31.
Wenner, L. A. (2015). Communication and sport, where art thou? Epistemological reflections on the moment and field(s) of play. Communication & Sport, 3(3), 247–260.
Ziegler, C. (2016). Fair play: How LGBT athletes are claiming their rightful place in sports. Akashic Books.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2021 The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Bagley, M.M., Taylor, M.A. (2021). Being There, Being Here: What Critical Field Methods Can Tell Us About WWC 2019. In: Yanity, M., Sarver Coombs, D. (eds) 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-75401-3_8
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-75401-3_8
Published:
Publisher Name: Palgrave Macmillan, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-030-75400-6
Online ISBN: 978-3-030-75401-3
eBook Packages: Literature, Cultural and Media StudiesLiterature, Cultural and Media Studies (R0)