In this paper we will draw on research conducted for the AFL which, in part, illuminated aspects of the Faustian pact that many young men enter into in order to become an elite level, professional footballer in what is increasingly a global sports entertainment industry. In order to develop an identity as an AFL footballer these young men willingly sell their body, mind and soul to one club, or to many. For varying lengths of time these pacts can have significant payoffs - in terms of a sense of self, and in monetary terms. For many though, these payoffs are limited and must be accounted for sometime in the future - an accounting that in Faustian terms, can carry significant costs to the body, mind and soul long after the cheering has stopped, and when the benefits come mainly in the form of memories. In this paper we argue that elements of these pacts can be identified and analysed via the following: understanding AFL as a sports entertainment business; using Foucault's work on the care of the self to explore what it means to be an elite level professional and the demands made by others on the body, mind and soul of players; and the idea that a career as an elite level professional footballer has a number of phases (early, mid and late) in which the nature of a professional identity - shaped by different demands on the body, mind and soul- changes.
History
Event
Annual conference of the Australian Sociological Association (2006 : Perth, Western Australia)
Pagination
1 - 11
Publisher
TASA
Location
Perth, Western Australia
Place of publication
Perth, W.A.
Start date
2006-12-04
End date
2006-12-07
ISBN-13
9781740521390
ISBN-10
1740521390
Language
eng
Notes
Reproduced with the specific permission of the copyright owner.
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed; E Conference publication
Copyright notice
2006, The Author
Title of proceedings
TASA 2006 : Proceedings of the annual conference of the Australian Sociological Association : Sociology for a mobile world