Description
International Print and Broadcast Campaign: reaching out to sports writers and broadcasters with an interest in race/ethnicity in sport Reviews expected from International Soccer Network and several freelance soccer journalists Social Media Campaign and copromotion of ebook DRCs available through Edelweiss Aiming for a joint promotion with Kicking and Screening Film Festival (NY, September) The book launch in mid-September 2021 coincides with the first matches of the UEFA Champions League with soccer fans pumped and primed for soccer-themed material. Teams included in the book are some of the European Cup favorites: Juventus, Real Madrid, Borussia Dortmund, Bayern Munich, AFC Ajax, Celtic, Liverpool, Manchester United, as well as some of the scrappiest. The author also explores a host of teams from Central Europe and former Yugoslavia making their bids to join the international leagues. We will capitalize on publicity associated with a recent research trend highlighted on NPR (eg. Jan 28, 2021) and in the NY Times (July 2021) that examines the effects of fans on the success of teams and how individual players actually play. The pandemic "ghost games" provided a unique way to study this, showing racial disparities: players of African descent performed notably better without the fans heckling them. Outreach to design blogs. Unique font design updates the Ultras' font: Ultras Liberi, a version of the fasciofont popular with left-wing and right-wing extremists since the early 20th century in Europe. This version will be released as an open-source free font timed with the launch of the book, providing another marketing angle.
About the Author
Dr. Mitja Velikonja is a Professor for Cultural Studies and head of Center for Cultural and Religious Studies at University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. Main areas of his research include contemporary Central-European and Balkan political ideologies, subcultures and graffiti culture, collective memory and post-socialist nostalgia. His monographs include Rock'n'Retro - New Yugoslavism in Contemporary Slovenian Music (Sophia, 2013), Titostalgia - A Study of Nostalgia for Josip Broz (Peace Institute, Ljubljana, 2008), Eurosis - A Critique of the New Eurocentrism (Peace Institute, Ljubljana, 2005) and Religious Separation and Political Intolerance in Bosnia-Herzegovina (TAMU Press, 2003). He is co-author of the book Celestial Yugoslavia: Interaction of Political Mythologies and Popular Culture (XX vek, 2012), and co-editor and co-author of books Post-Yugoslavia - New Cultural and Political Perspectives (Palgrave, 2014) and Yugoslavia From A Historical Perspective (HCHR, 2017). He was a full-time visiting professor at Jagiellonian University in Krakow (2002 and 2003), at Columbia University in New York (2009 and 2014), at University of Rijeka (2015), at New York Institute in St. Petersburg (2015 and 2016), at Yale University (2020), Fulbright visiting researcher in Philadelphia (2004/2005), and visiting researcher at The Netherlands Institute of Advanced Studies (2012) and at the Remarque Institute of the New York University (2018). For his achievements he received four national and one international award (Erasmus EuroMedia Award by European Society for Education and Communication, 2008). His last monograph Post-Socialist Political Graffiti in the Balkans and Central Europe (Routledge, 2020) was awarded as one of the most important scientific achievements of University of Ljubljana for the year 2020.
Reviews
Velikonja suggests the flexibility of graffiti, showing both their potential to be neutered through domestication and aestheticization, as well as their capacity for serious political subversion.
-Maria Todorova, professor at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, author of Imagining the Balkans
When I saw a horde of Euro football fans urinating in the fountain of a Mediterranean town, I was sure that was all they had to say about themselves and the world. Yet, after reading Mitja Velikonja's book about football fans' graffiti, we learn that these fan-tribes have something more to express about our present societies. As Velikonja's archive with hundreds of images shows, these are subcultures from margins of society with a need for public attention, performance and self-expression, whose graffiti and street art has a sketchy yet curiously diverse ideology behind their bizarre spectacles.
-Vjekoslav Perica, author of Balkan Idols: Religion and Nationalism in Yugoslav States
Mapping the visual - and vicious - struggles between football supporter groups over dominance and territory in urban landscapes of Europe, Velikonja creates a wonderful overview of this ambiguous, inventive and provocative art form, created by and for the people, and concerned with so much more than football: gender and class, local, regional and national loyalties, money, politics and emotions.
-Tea Sindbaek Andersen, author of Usable History? Representations of Yugoslavia's difficult past from 1945 to 2002
Remarkable DIY designs are featured in Mitja Velikonja's scholarly illustrated book. [...] Velikonja's analyses are an essential addition to any discussion about the connection between football and graffiti, as well as its effect on social affairs in the streets.
-Anthony Ausgang, Artillery
Book Information
ISBN 9781954600027
Author Mitja Velikonja
Format Paperback
Page Count 176
Imprint DoppelHouse Press
Publisher DoppelHouse Press