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[Commlist] New book: Global Sports Fandom in South Korea: American Major League Baseball and its Fans in the Online Community
Mon Nov 02 13:38:10 GMT 2020
I am pleased to announce the recent publication of my book, “Global
Sports Fandom in South Korea: American Major League Baseball and its
Fans in the Online Community” from Palgrave.
Please order the book to your libraries so any interested students and
persons may access it. If you are interested in *reviewing this book*,
please email me ((choy /at/ hufs.ac.kr) <mailto:(choy /at/ hufs.ac.kr)>). I will
correspond with any interested scholars for sharing necessary
information and materials.
This book is also an inauguration publication from a new book series of
*The Palgrave Sport in Asia series*, which I and William Kelly work as
founding series editors. If you have interest in this series or in
submitting a book proposal, please refer to its website page from:
https://www.palgrave.com/kr/series/16544
<https://www.palgrave.com/kr/series/16544>
This book
-examines the cultural politics of global sports fandom in South Korea
-offers an ethnographic assessment of the shifting identities and
changing everyday lives of Korean MLB fans
-considers the changing nature of a broadly nationalist sports fandom as
well as its compliance with neoliberal values in South Korea
It is based on my online ethnography of Korean MLB fans along with
in-depth interviews with several fans in South Korea and U.S.A. My
ethnographic analysis of global sports fans and their daily activities
online will provide insightful inquiries and detailed discussion to
students, scholars and academics in cultural studies, sport studies,
cultural anthropology, media studies, as well as Korean studies, Asian
studies and Asian-American studies.
Palgrave site: https://www.palgrave.com/kr/book/9789811531958
<https://www.palgrave.com/kr/book/9789811531958>
To access the E-book or to order the book to libraries, go to the
Palgrave site above or Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/Global-Sports-Fandom-South-Korea-ebook/dp/B08GHVBH67/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=global+sports+fandom&qid=1603278350&s=books&sr=1-1
<https://www.amazon.com/Global-Sports-Fandom-South-Korea-ebook/dp/B08GHVBH67/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=global+sports+fandom&qid=1603278350&s=books&sr=1-1>
*Descriptions:*
This book explores the transformation of cultural and national identity
of global sports fans in South Korea, which has undergone extensive
cultural and economic globalization since the 1990s. Through
ethnographic research of Korean Major League Baseball fans and their
online community, this book demonstrates how a postcolonial nation and
its people are developing long-distance affiliation with American sports
accompanied by nationalist sentiments and regional rivalry. Becoming an
MLB fan in South Korea does not simply lead one to nurturing a
cosmopolitan identity, but to reconstituting one’s national
imaginations. Younghan Cho suggests individuated nationalism as the
changing nature of the national among the Korean MLB fandom in which the
national is articulated by personal choices, consumer rights and free
market principles. The analysis of the Korean MLB fandom illuminates the
complicated and even contradictory procedures of decentering and
fragmenting nationalism in South Korea, which have been balanced by
recalling nationalism in combination with neoliberal governmentality.
*Reviews of the book: *
“A timely and original unraveling of some complexities of the global
trajectories of sports fandom. Using the tools of cultural studies, Cho
makes important contributions to some crucial debates around popular and
online culture, nationalism, and globalization.” Lawrence Grossberg, the
Morris Davis Distinguished Professor of Communication Studies and
Cultural Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
“Sport in the 21^st -century is being thoroughly globalized and East
Asia is at the center of this process. Cho’s absorbing ethnography of
baseball fans in South Korea is a very smartly analyzed account of the
local practices, national sentiments, and transnational passions that
construct a globalized sport fandom in South Korea.” William W. Kelly,
Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and Sumitomo Professor Emeritus of
Japanese Studies at Yale University
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