How Soccer Explains the World
Foer’s interpretation of globalization
is represented through his writings about soccer and how the game of soccer
demonstrates world politics. In other words, thee game of soccer, the players,
and the fans all represent international relations between states and regions.
Historically soccer is the most popular sport that any and everyone can play no
matter how much money someone has. All a person needs is a ball, legs and a
piece of open land. Because of the simplicity of the sport everyone can take
part in it whether it is from the field or from the sidelines, and that is the
same way that international relations work. There are the political figures
constantly at work making “legitimate” decisions for the state while the
citizens provide their own sideline comments and demonstrations for what they
believe, and the army fights for the rights of the state they represent.
Foer specifically talks about how
globalization is failing and its attempt to eradicate hatred in a world where
everyone is against each other is not working correctly. Rivalry between
cultures is inevitable even within one state. Every state wants to be the best,
most advanced and the strongest. Although the main goal of globalization is to
have everyone understand and respect other cultures, globalization can
potentially have the opposite effect. Each state and its citizens Is determined
to prove why they are the best and why everyone should respect their culture,
which in turn instead of spreading culture increases the completion for whose
culture is the best. In soccer, where it is suppose to be a team, fair play,
good sportsmanship sport that is supposed to bring the world together with one
common game, the level of completion between nations increases instead.
Another issue he addresses, going
off of the failure of globalization, is that nationalism and tribalism will keep
pushing on especially to spite governments forcing different groups to share
uncommon ground. Although there are a lot of different ethnicities and
nationalities living in the same place, which should boost globalization, it
can have an extreme opposite effect. As evidenced throughout history in Europe
with the Holocaust as well as racism against African Americans in America, just
because people are living in the same country does not automatically mean they
will have the same ideals and vote for the same parties or root for the same
teams. Soccer successfully demonstrates this on a smaller scale where different
people root for different teams within one city. Especially in England and the
rest of the European Union where there are multiple teams for one state, which
different people root for and leads people to fight against each other, even
with things as simple as sports.
Foer’s take on globalization through
the example of soccer captures the idea of how globalization may be occurring but
having the opposite effect of what leaders may have expected. It has raised completion
on and off fields between states to be the best and strongest team that there
is. Soccer is a microcosm of what the world of international relations is
really like.