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Sport Stadiums as Focal Points of Societal and Cultural Dynamics

A German-French research project including University Freiburg researchers is studying the significance of arenas in the “long twentieth century”

Freiburg, Mar 17, 2023

Sport Stadiums as Focal Points of Societal and Cultural Dynamics

An interdisciplinary research project is devoted to the broad social significance of sport and its spaces – also in view of the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris Photo: Adobe Stock/Csaba Peterdi

Stadiums and other sport arenas are not merely functional spaces for athletic competitions – they are also spaces in which athletes and spectators interact, in which emotions, experiences, values, and ideas circulate. These dimensions are the focus of an interdisciplinary, German-French research project with Prof. Dr. Andreas Gelz, Professor of Romance Philology from the University of Freiburg. The project “Sport-Arenen – Szenen und (Werk-)Stätten des Sport-Events / Arènes du sport – Scènes et fabrique(s) de l’événement sportif” (Sport Arenas – Scenes and Sites of the Sporting Event) starts in mid-March 2023, runs for three years, and is receiving slightly more than a million euros in funding from the French National Research Agency (ANR) and the German Research Foundation (DFG).

Insights beyond the subsystem of sport

“I am particularly pleased about this funding at the present time, because the public debates in the run-up to the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris demonstrate the importance of sport and its spaces, the ideals but also the controversies associated with it,” says Gelz. “We hope to be able to make a contribution to this discussion in the form of scientific groundwork.” Six researchers from the fields of literary and cultural studies and history from the University of Freiburg, Saarland University, and the Universities of Paris-Sorbonne, Besançon, Rouen, and Limoges are involved in the research project.

The project revolves around sport arenas as focal points of socioeconomic and political conditions as well as cultural dynamics and relations. The participating researchers assume that stadiums, playing fields, arenas, sport palaces, velodromes, racetracks, but also casual and informal sport sites such as soccer fields in parks are emblematic spaces whose significance and epistemological value extend far beyond sport as a social subsystem.

A common German-French sport culture

The temporal framework of the overall project is the “long twentieth century,” extending from the inception of modern sports in the last third of the nineteenth century, through its rapid development into a constitutive element of the emerging industrial and mass society, to the early twenty-first century with its new surge in professionalization, commercialization, and medialization.

The project adopts a German-French perspective that is to be extended to include the European and global context. “This approach seems particularly important to me,” says Gelz. “Germany and France share a common sport culture, in which gymnastics initially played a fundamental role, followed by cycling, swimming, and the so-called English sports, like athletics, boxing, soccer, rugby, and tennis. In addition, large sport facilities were built in Germany and France almost at the same time, such as the Vélodrome d'hiver in Paris in 1903, the Sportpalast in Berlin in 1910, and the Olympic stadiums of Paris and Berlin in 1924 and 1936 respectively. Even though sport cultures have a national dimension, our transnational approach points to the complex cross-border reality of sport.”

Subproject on the development of women’s soccer

The aesthetic shape and shaping of stadiums in the media will form another thematic focus of the project: thus, sport fans were enabled first by means of print media, from newspapers to literature, then radio, and finally cinema and television to experience from a distance, as it were, virtually, the stadium and therefore the sporting action itself as an aesthetic practice. A separate subproject is devoted to the role and position of women in the stadium from a gender perspective and examines the development of women’s soccer in Germany and France.

Fact sheet:

  • The research project Sport-Arenen – Szenen und (Werk-)Stätten des Sport-Events / Arènes du sport – Scènes et fabrique(s) de l’événement sportiv (Sport Arenas – Scenes and Sites of the Sporting Event) runs from 2023 to 2026 and is receiving slightly more than a million euros in funding from the German Research Foundation (DFG) and the French National Research Agency (ANR).
  • The applicant Andreas Gelz is professor of Romance Philology at the University of Freiburg. His research foci include the Spanish eighteenth century, the history of avant-gardes, contemporary French literature, and cultural studies issues such as the phenomenon of the scandal, migration, heroization processes, and the relationship between sport and literature. Gelz is a subproject leader at the Collaborative Research Center 948 “Heroes – Heroizations – Heroisms” at the University of Freiburg.
  • Also involved in the project are Saarland University as well as the french Universities of Paris-Sorbonne, Besançon, Rouen, and Limoges.

 

Media contact:
Annette Kollefrath-Persch
University and Science Communications
University of Freiburg
Tel.: 0761/203-8909
annette.persch@zv.uni-freiburg.de