[ANU Pacific.Institute] Sport, Masculinity, and Neoliberalism: Cameroonian Footballers, Fijian Rugby Players, and Senegalese Wrestlers - 26 October
Samuel Bashfield
samuel.bashfield at anu.edu.au
Thu Oct 12 16:06:08 AEDT 2017
PUBLIC LECTURE
Sport, Masculinity, and Neoliberalism: Cameroonian Footballers, Fijian Rugby Players, and Senegalese Wrestlers
Thursday 26 October 3:00pm - 5.00pm
Speaker
Professor Niko Besnier
University of Amsterdam Editor, American Ethnologist
Location
Hedley Bull Lecture Theatre 1
Hedley Bull Building #130 Garren Road, ANU
RSVP
Event website<http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/cap-events/2017-10-26/sport-masculinity-and-neoliberalism-cameroonian-footballers-fijian-rugby>
Enquiries
E admin.chl at anu.edu.au
This lecture is free and open to the public
In the Global South since the 1980s, as economic downturns under pressure from the forces of neoliberalism have eroded social relations and pauperized populations, sport and athletes' bodies have become major focus of attention in many countries, offering promises of a better future that lies elsewhere. These dynamics have occurred as global sport industries have become commoditized, mediatized, and corporatized, transformations that have been spearheaded by the growing importance of privatized media interests. In Cameroon, Fiji, and Senegal, athletic hopefuls prospectively embody new gendered subjectivities in hope of marketing their athletic talent in these industries, which take the form of new religious convictions such as Pentecostalism and maraboutism and transform the constitution of masculinity.
Niko Besnier is Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Amsterdam and Editor-in-Chief of American Ethnologist. In 2011, he was awarded a five-year Advanced Grant from the European Research Council for a project titled Globalization, Sports, and the Precarity of Masculinity. He is the author and editor of many influential volumes including Literacy, Emotion and Authority (Cambridge, 1995), Gossip and the Everyday Production of Politics (Hawai'i, 2009), On the Edge of the Global (Stanford, 2011), and Gender on the Edge (with Kalissa Alexeyeff, Hawai'i, 2014). He has taught previously at the University of Illinois, Yale University, Victoria University of Wellington, and UCLA, and held visiting appointments or fellowships at the University of Hawai'i, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, University of Auckland, Kagoshima University, Waseda University, University of Melbourne, École Normal Supérieure Paris, Université de Toulouse III Paul Sabatier, and the University of Manchester.
Co-presented by
ANU Pacific Institute
School of Culture, History and
Language
ANU College of Asia & the Pacific
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