Football and Colonialism. Nuno Domingos

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Football and Colonialism - Nuno Domingos New African Histories

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1. Football and the Narration of a Colonial Situation

       Chapter 2. A Colonial Sport’s Field

       Chapter 3. Football and the Moral Economy of the Lourenço Marques Suburbs

       Chapter 4. A Suburban Style of Play

       Chapter 5. Witchcraft Practices in Football’s Symbolic Economy

       Chapter 6. Sweetness and Speed Tactics as Disenchantment of the World

       Chapter 7. Football Narratives and Social Networks in Late Colonial Mozambique

       Chapter 8. Embodied History

       Notes

       Bibliography

       Index

       Illustrations

      MAPS

       1.1. Mozambique, 1903

       1.2. Metropolitan Portugal and the Portuguese colonial empire (used in classrooms), 1934

       2.1. Lourenço Marques and its suburbs, 1907–8

       2.2. General plan of the city and harbor of Lourenço Marques, 1926

       2.3. Plan of the city of Lourenço Marques, 1929

      FIGURES

       2.1. Lourenço Marques’s Gorjão wharf and railway lines

       2.2. The tennis courts in the Public Garden and the Clube da Polana golf course

       2.3. Sketch of a modern gymnasium

       3.1. Munhuana’s native neighborhood—crematorium

       3.2. A company of native infantry

       6.1. Dominant triangles in the short-pass game

       6.2. Dominant triangles in the long-pass game

       6.3. Eusébio shooting, Amsterdam, Ajax Stadium, 9 May 1965

       7.1. Benfica football team, Amsterdam, Ajax Stadium, 9 May 1965

       7.2. Eusébio and Flora; the Benfica team leaving the Netherlands

       7.3. Children playing in Chamanculo, 2010

      TABLES

       2.1. Percentage of black members and mestiço members at sports clubs and associations in Mozambique, 1935–58

       2.2. Percentage of black members and mestiço members of sports clubs and associations in Mozambique and Lourenço Marques, 1959–64

       2.3. Number of Mozambican sports associations and clubs and total membership, 1930–64

       Foreword

      The bigger picture is sometimes best seen in the littlest details. According to Thomas Hylland Eriksen, the importance of anthropology lies precisely in its ability to examine “large issues” in “small places.”1 That is exactly what Nuno Domingos accomplishes in Football and Colonialism: Body and Popular Culture in Urban Mozambique.

      At first glance, the work is about football as it was played in Lourenço Marques—the largest city and administrative center of the Portuguese colony of Mozambique—in the first half of the twentieth century. The work charts the development of the game from the founding of the first football clubs by British expatriates, to the establishment of satellites of Portuguese metropolitan clubs such as Sporting and Benfica, to the opening up of these clubs to African players including mostly elites of mixed racial heritage, to the eventual creation of an African Football Association whose players were mostly working-class Africans living in the poorer periphery of the city where their matches were mostly played.

      Historians of football will, of course, be interested to learn more of the sporting context that produced such talents as Mário Coluna and Eusébio, both of whom made their mark in European football in the mid-twentieth century. And football’s claim to be a—if not the—“world sport” will only be strengthened by accounts of the enthusiasm with which urban Mozambicans of varied backgrounds embraced the game so long ago. Domingos’s work is, however, far more than a historical account of the spread of a European (if only in its “modern” form) game to an African colony. The bigger picture with which this work engages is the relationship between colonized and colonizer, seen through the lens of that game.

      As such, this account builds upon and extends a social science tradition that has produced rich results in African studies in recent decades, namely the study of “popular culture.” To date, studies of African popular culture have mostly focused on the arts, including sculpture, painting, music, dance, literature, cinema, and theater. Such work has rendered visible the dynamic interaction of tradition and modernity on the African continent, highlighting the ways in which African forms of expression have engaged with the lived experience of historical processes connecting the continent to a larger world, from colonialism, to revolutionary nationalism, to socialism, to neoliberalism. In the mix, Africans have adopted and adapted European genres of expression to their own ends and, as this body of work has shown, contributed profoundly to the global trajectories of these various forms.

      Domingos himself adopts and adapts the “popular culture” approach to his ends in this study. He extends the approach to a realm too often ignored by historians and social scientists, namely sport. By seeing how

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