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Simon Critchley
What do we think about when we think about football? Football is about so many things: memory, history, place, social class, gender (especially masculinity, but increasingly femininity too), family identity, tribal identity, national identity, the nature of groups. It is essentially collaborative, even socialist, yet it exists in a sump of greed, corruption, capitalism and autocracy. Philosopher Simon Critchley attempts to make sense of it all, and to establish a system of aesthetics - even poetics - to show what is beautiful in the beautiful game. He explores, too, how the experience of watching football opens a particular dimension in time; how its magic wards off oblivion; how its dramas play out national identity and non-identity; how we spectators, watching football with tragic pensiveness, participate in the play. And of course, as a football fan, he writes about his heroes and villains: about Zidane and Cruyff, Clough and Revie, Shankly and Klopp. (Source: [Profile Books](https://profilebooks.com/work/what-we-think-about-when-we-think-about-football/))
| Publisher | Metis Yayincilik |
|---|---|
| Pages | 176 |
| Format | paperback |
| Search language | turkish |
| ISBN_10 | 6-053-16122-5 primary |
| ISBN_13 | 978-6-053-16122-6 primary |
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