A Culture of Memory Book presentation
Transcription
A Culture of Memory Book presentation
A Culture of Memory: Media, Rituals, & the Practice of Remembrance, Commemoration, & Oblivion in the World of Football Markwart HERZOG Schwaben Akademie European Football & Collective Memory: Transnational Media Events FREE Conference Universität Stuttgart, 22-3 February 2013 1 Back in September 2012 the FREE-conference in Besançon had put the spotlight on a vital topic connected to the culture of memory in football by choosing as its theme “Origins & Birth of a Europe of Football”. And, right now the present FREEconference in Stuttgart explicitly discusses “European football & collective memory”, which is unusual as a central theme for this kind of meeting. Albrecht Sonntag is right when he called “the history of European football and its contribution to collective memory” an “underestimated area of academic research” (Sonntag, 2012) in the second FREE-Newsletter. In 2012 Hans Joachim Teichler agreed with the sentiment expressed by Sonntag when he declared that there was “still no specific study regarding the ‘culture of memory in German sport’.” And he added: “Sport organises the here and now, it plans for the future and – one is tempted to add with a certain resignation – it forgets its own past.” (Teichler 2012a, 121) Teichler himself composed several articles on this topic. His publications focus, nonetheless, strictly on the insincere “Erinnerungsverhalten (commemoration behaviour)” (Teichler 2012b) of clubs, federations, and of the people responsible during the time when the sport was dominated by the NS regime and by the rule of the SED party in the days of the GDR State. Therefore, Teichler left out the broad and rather diverse range of collective memory of sport, that is to say its manifold “Spielweisen der Erinnerung (modes of remembrance)” (Borsdorf/Grütter 2000, 48–52). This methodological limitation is not untypical for the German sports history and the scholarly exploration of the collective memory of sport which until the end of the twentieth century either remained firmly in the context of the formulation of political injustice under the two German dictatorships (cf. Krüger 2012) or focused on the history of racism as well as on that of social exclusion and discrimination (cf. Krüger/Wedemeyer-Kolwe 2009). There are only very few scholarly contributions whose focus is less narrow and whose understanding of collective memory is not limited to a mere political analysis but also includes themes and issues of cultural history (cf. Herzog 2005; Herzog 2011; Herzog 2013c). Not to forget the wide and important field of a rich and diverse sepulchral culture in football that also needs to be included in this kind of discussion (for further examples of monographies dealing with specific case studies see the bibliography Herzog 2013b, 62–69). In the UK, to the contrary, several scientific studies have recently been published; among them contributions by Anne Eyre, Liam Foster, Neville Gabie, Gary Osmond, Murray Phillips, Maureen Smith, John Williams, Jason Wood, Kate Woodthorpe, and 2 in particular the work of Mike Huggins (University of Cumbria), who is well-known as the author of several studies in the field of cultural history particularly rich in source material. Huggins moreover explored the commercialisation of the funerary culture in British sport during the nineteenth century (cf. Huggins 2008; Huggins, 2011; Huggins, 2012; for recent studies see the bibliographies in the essays published by Huggins; see also the excellent, popular book by Sharpe 2001, who was the first to present a comprehensive collection of data regarding the funerary customs for deceased sportsmen, functionaries and fans by way of scattering the ashes in British stadiums, cf. Sharpe, 2001, 1–18). And, finally, we owe much to Dave Russell (Leeds Metropolitan University) for his study which contains rich material regarding the culture of memory in British football of the late twentieth and early twenty-first century (cf. Russell 2006; Russell 2013). The new book published by the Schwabenakademie (cf. Herzog, 2013a) which I present today was released as volume seventeen by the publishing house W. Kohlhammer and is part of the series “Irseer Dialoge: Kultur und Wissenschaft interdisziplinär (Irsee Dialogues: interdisciplinary approaches to the arts and sciences)” and has close ties to the afore-mentioned, detailed investigations. For the first time a study in cultural history analyses the collective memory of football on such a broad basis of single case studies: 18 authors present a range of examples from ten European countries. After two introductory contributions, four separate sections illuminate themes and issues related to media, to rituals and customs of remembrance, commemoration and oblivion in the world of European football, as follows: I. the policy of commemoration of federations and clubs, II. the significance of fan cultures as initiators and preservers of collective memory, III. stadiums and museums as places of remembrance and commemoration as well as IV. politically motivated cases of “social death” and the annihilation of memory (“damnatio memoriae”), in particular under the two German dictatorships and in socialist countries of Eastern Europe. The aim of the essays is by no means limited to the mere analysis of the written body of commemorative evidence preserved by the clubs and federations but rather concentrate on numerous other forms and displays of memory and remembrance, for example by discussing the following aspects: 3 – ritualised performance/staging practices (fan choreographies, spontaneous commemorative shrines), – acoustic orchestration before the start of the match and during breaks (minute’s silence, minute’s applause), – the significance of club names, jerseys, logos and pins for the collective memory of football clubs, – the construction and performance of remembrance as a legitimising tool for political systems, – the monuments, commemorative plaques, and statues made from stone and metal (monuments for fallen soldiers and military heroes, statues of footballers), – the business model of the “stadium commemorative bricks” and of “commemorative walls”, – the commemoration of military events and of club members fallen in the wars by federations, clubs and fan cultures, – the unifying effect of celebrated sports celebrities, of charismatic coaches and managers for the creation of collective memory, – the visual expression of mourning and rites of condolence by way of wearing specific clothing (commemorative jerseys, wearing of black mourning bands during the match), – burials in British football stadiums (sepulture of urns or scattering of the ashes of deceased players, managers and fans), – memorial services as well as funerals of football players and fans as particular examples for the secularisation of the European funerary culture, – instances of collective mourning of fan communities in the aftermath of catastrophes in stadiums (for example the events at Ibrox Park, 1902 und 1971; Heysel, 1985; Hillsborough, 1989) or after the sudden death of a popular football celebrity (for example the German goalkeeper Robert Enke, who committed suicide in 2009, fans from all over Europe condoled with his club on his tragic death), – fan cemeteries in Amsterdam (opened in 1996), Hamburg (2008) and Gelsenkirchen (2012), – German, Dutch and British undertakers appointed by football clubs with a special licence for their services, – the objects of the everyday material culture of football which are being traded and auctioned on the market for sports memorabilia, 4 – the virtual Halls of Fame of clubs and federations and the world wide web as a forum for commemoration and mourning, – last but not least, and this is the central focus, the book discusses football clubs which constitute themselves – as an essential part of their corporate identity – via the above-mentioned media, rituals and social practices as trans-generational communities (cf. Herzog 2003, 196–203; Herzog, 2005, 183–192; Herzog, 2011, 163–167; Herzog, 2013b, 56f.). This volume of essays presents itself as a first step towards the cultural-historical exploration of the entire breadth and manifold variety of memorial and sepulchral culture as an integral part of football. It is to be hoped that it will be followed by many more such investigations. For the FREE-conferences concerned with commemorative culture and with the collective memory of football the volume will be of special interest as it presents a rich tapestry of connecting threads and points of reference. References Borsdorf, U./Grütter, H. Th. (2000). Spielweisen der Erinnerung: Fußball und Gedächtnis, in: Brüggemeier/Borsdorf/Steiner (2000), 48–52. Brüggemeier, F.-J./Borsdorf, U./Steiner, J., ed. (2000). Der Ball ist rund: Katalog zur Fußballausstellung im Gasometer Oberhausen. Essen: Klartext 2000. Fischer, N./Herzog, M. ed. (2005). Nekropolis: Der Friedhof als Ort der Toten und der Lebenden. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer 2005. Groß, D./Tag, B./Schweikardt, Chr. ed. (2001). Who wants to live forever? Postmoderne Formen des Weiterwirkens nach dem Tod. Frankfurt a.M./New York: Campus 2011. Herzog, M. (2003). Familie – Männerbund – Söldnertrupp: Zur Selbststilisierung von Sportvereinen am Beispiel der ‚FCK-Familie‘. In: Weber/Herzog 2003, 167–230 <http://www.schwabenakademie.de/cms/uploads/media/Weber-Herzog_Familie-heute_01.pdf>. Herzog, M. (2005). Trauer- und Bestattungsrituale der Fußballvereinskultur: Totenmemoria – Ahnenbiographien – Stadionbegräbnis – Performance. In: Fischer/Herzog (2005), 181–210. Herzog, M. (2011). Wahre Leidenschaft kennt keinen Abpfiff“: Postmortale Inszenierung, Memorialisierung und Verewigung in Fangemeinschaften des Vereinsfußballs, in: Groß/Tag/Schweikardt (2011), 163–188. Herzog, M., ed. (2013a). Memorialkultur im Fußballsport: Medien, Rituale und Praktiken des Erinnerns, Gedenkens und Vergessens. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer. Herzog, M. (2013b). Erinnern, Gedenken und Vergessen im Fußballsport: Visuelle und akustische Medien – schriftliche Überlieferung – soziale Praktiken, in: Herzog (2013a), 17–70. Herzog, M. (2013c). „The concept of the eternal fan“: Bemerkungen zur Memorial- und Sepulkralkultur des Fußballsports. In: Kirchliches Jahrbuch für die Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland 2005, Lieferung 2 („Lebensvergewisserungen: Erkundungsgänge zur gegenwärtigen Bestattungs- und Trauerkultur in Kirche und Gesellschaft“). Gütersloh: Gütersloher Verlagshaus 2013 (in preparation). Huggins, M. (2008). Death, memorialisation and the Victorian sporting hero. In: The Local Historian 38, 257–265 Huggins, M. (2011). Reading the Funeral Rite: A Cultural Analysis of the Funeral Ceremonials and Burial of Selected Leading Sportsmen in Victorian England, 1864–1888. In: Journal of Sport History 38, 407–424. Huggins, M. (2012). Gone but not forgotten: sporting heroes, heritage and graveyard commemoration. In: Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice 16, 479–495. 5 Krüger, A./Wedemeyer-Kolwe, B., ed. (2009). Vergessen, verdrängt, abgelehnt: Zur Geschichte der Ausgrenzung im Sport. Münster: Lit. Krüger, M., ed. (2012). Erinnerungskultur im Sport: Vom kritischen Umgang mit Carl Diem, Sepp Herberger und anderen Größen des deutschen Sports, Münster: Lit 2012. Russell, D. (2006). ‚We all agree, name the stand after Shankly‘: Cultures of commemoration in late twentieth English football culture. In: Sport in History 26, 1–25. Russell, D. (2013). ‚We all agree, name the stand after Shankly‘: Cultures of commemoration in late twentieth and early twenty-first century English football culture, in: Herzog (2013a), 223–247. Sharpe, G. (2001). The Final Whistle: Midfield farewells, sudden deaths and other strange but true passings from football’s history. London: Robson 2001. Sonntag, A. (2012). Is football memory policy-relevant? In: FREE Football Research in an Enlarged Europe, Newsletter Issue 2 <www.essca.fr/flipbooks/Newsletter-FREE/Newsletter-FREE2/index.html>. Teichler, H. J. (2012a). Erinnerungskultur im deutschen Sport und die Diem-Debatte, in: Krüger (2012), 119–136. Teichler, H. J. (2012b). Verzögertes Erinnern: Die Aufarbeitung der NS-Vergangenheit im bundesdeutschen Sport, in: Zeitgeschichte-online, Dezember <www.zeitgeschichteonline.de/thema/verz%C3%B6gertes-erinnern>. Weber, W. E. J./Herzog, M. (2003). „Ein Herz und eine Seele“? Familie heute. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer 2003, 167–230 <http://www.schwabenakademie.de/cms/uploads/media/Weber-Herzog_Familieheute_01.pdf>. 6