
"The Big Red Machine," an assemblyline of sober, unsmiling Olympic champions--this was the image that dominated Western thinking about Soviet sports. But for Soviet citizens the experience of watching sports in the USSR was always very different. Soviet spectators paid comparatively little attention to most Olympic sports. They flocked instead to the games they really wanted to watch, rooted for teams and heroes of their own choosing, and carried on with a rowdiness typical of sportsfans everywhere. The Communist state sought to use sports and other forms of mass culture to instill values of discipline, order, health, and culture. The fans, however, just wanted to have fun. Official Soviet ideology was never able to control or comprehend the regressed and pleasure-seeking component not only of spectator sport but of all popular culture.In Serious Fun, Robert Edelman provides the first history of any aspect of Soviet sports, covering the most popular spectator attractions from 1917 up to the end of the Soviet Union in 1991. Edelman has used the highly candid sports press, memoirs, instruction books, team yearbooks, and press guides and supplmented them with Soviet television broadcasts and interviews with players, coaches, team officials, television bureaucrats, journalists, and fans to detail how spectator sport withstood the power of the state and became a sphere of life that allowed citizens to resist, deflect, and even modify the actions of the authorities.Focusing on the most popular sports of soccer, hockey, and basketball, Edelman discusses the dominant teams and the biggest stars: the international competitive successes as well as the many failures. He covers a variety of topics familiar to Western sports fans including professionalism, fan violence, corruption, political meddling, the sports press, television, and the effect of big money on competition.More than just a sports book, Serious Fun takes us deep into the social fabric of Soviet life.
This book investigates the tension between the Soviet state's attempt to use sports as a tool for ideological control and the reality of spectator behavior as a form of individual expression. Robert Edelman, a historian specializing in Soviet culture, utilizes a diverse array of primary sources including candid sports journalism, personal memoirs, and interviews with key figures to reconstruct the lived experience of the Soviet fan. He argues that spectator sports functioned as a vital sphere of autonomy where citizens could resist and modify state influence through their own preferences and rowdy engagement.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of Soviet politics and popular culture. Readers frequently note the depth of the research and the author's ability to humanize the Soviet experience through the lens of sports fandom.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
1993-05-27
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195079485
ISBN-13:
9780195079487
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