Issue 73 of INTERNATIONAL SOCIALISM, quarterly journal of
the Socialist Workers Party (Britain) Published December 1996 Copyright ©
International Socialism
http://pubs.socialistreviewindex.org.uk/isj73/bambery.htm
MARXISM AND SPORTS
by Chris Bambery
Sport is enjoyed by millions of people in our society and
also, precisely for the same reason, sport is big business. Total revenues
generated by sport in the US and Canada (from ticket sales to purchases of
sports equipment) were more than $88.5 billion dollars last year, and are
projected to rise to $160 billion by the turn of century. It is estimated that
by then North American firms would be spending $13.8 billion dollars on
advertising through sport alone while global sports advertising is set to
reach $430 billion. The television rights to the US National Football League
for 1990-1994 earned NFL $43.6 billion. Nike's total sales in the US were $4.73
billion in 1994. Some $600 million came through Michael Jordan branded
basketball shoes! In 1993 Nike spent almost $90 million on advertising and
marketing.
Football is often touted as the `people's game'. Yet for many, attendance at a premiership game is simply beyond their means that's if they can get a ticket to see big clubs like Manchester United or Newcastle United. The Chelsea versus Aston Villa game at the beginning of the 1996-1997 season saw each of the 28,000 people attending pay, on average, £20 a head. For the 1,750 away supporters who were permitted access there was no concession for children they also paid £20. This perhaps helps explain why the Social Trends survey shows that while 22 percent of the UK population attended a sports event as a spectator, more still are listed as having visited a historic building (23 percent), the cinema (33 percent) or the library (39 percent).1
The survey also shows that in Britain `people in social
class AB were twice as likely to have gone swimming or played in team sports
than those in social class E'.2
For some clubs the money collected at the gate is no longer
the key element in their finances. The Guardian on 14 September 1996 carried a
report on the finances of England's biggest club, Manchester United:
Of United's £60 million turnover last season, £23 came from
one, surprising source: merchandising
everything from replica shirts and videos to books and bedside lamps. To
put £23 million in perspective, we are talking a figure larger than the entire
annual turnover of any premiership club except Newcastle. To give an idea of
volume, United's magazine is, at 140,000 copies, the biggest selling sports
monthly in the UK. In Thailand it sells 40,000 copies a month in Thai.
Its first print in Norwegian last month sold out 9,000 copies in a week. Soon
it will be sold in Malaysia in Malay.
Income from satellite television alone means that England's
Premier League clubs will take in £670 million between 1996 and 2001.3
The most recent high point for English football was the
hosting of Euro 96 and the home nation's achievement in reaching the semi-final
(where they were only knocked out in the second stage of a penalty shootout).
At the England-Germany semi-final there were 14,000 people who paid nothing for
their tickets as a result of corporate hospitality 3,500 tickets were given to sponsors, while 7,000 plus were
sold through corporate hospitality.4 The cost of such hospitality by big
business was worth a total of £8 million for the whole tournament. The next
football World Cup will be in South Korea and Japan. Japanese multinationals have
already established a close relationship with FIFA, the competition's
organiser: `JVC, Fuji and Canon each sponsored USA 94 to the tune of £20
million, Sony Creative Products have exclusive marketing rights to the 1998
finals and Dentsu control a 49 percent stake in ISL Worldwide, the marketing
arm of FIFA'.5 This is the direct and easily recognised relationship between
sport and capitalism. But there is another, hidden relationship.
As England progressed towards the semi-finals of Euro 96 the
Financial Times carried the following survey of big business reaction to the
supposed euphoria sweeping the nation:
Jeff Forest of Sheffield based Tempered Spring reported:
`The England performance has given people a lift, and a happy workforce is a
better workforce.' Mr Peter Lowe who manages an automotive plant in
Burton-on-Trent, subsidiary of Johnson Controls, `believes that a run of
England victories will lead to higher productivity'.6
If we move beyond the most obvious links between capitalism
and sport and ask why it is that millions of people watch sport we must begin
with the work process and the reality of alienation under capitalism just as the capitalists quoted by the
Financial Times look to the effect of sport on the work process. For the vast
majority of people sport is something they enjoy. It is an essential escape
mechanism in their lives. For some it can become the means of clambering out of
poverty. For others participation in sport gives dignity to life. For millions
of people sport seems to provide an escape from the drudgery of everyday life.
For many more watching sport either live or, increasingly, on television
provides both a release from workday pressure and an easy identification with
an individual, club or country which seems to provide meaning to life. As one
veteran follower of West Ham remembers, football provided `relief from work,
from war...it was a way out. In the late 1920s the times were very hard'.7
It is against the reality of work not just in a factory but in a modern office, school or
hospital that we can examine the role of `leisure' under capitalism. Marx
points out, `At the same time that factory work exhausts the nervous system to
the uttermost, it does so with the many-sided play of the muscles, and
confiscates every atom of freedom, both in bodily and intellectual activity'.8
Elsewhere he wrote, `Time is everything, man is nothing; he is, at most, time's
carcass'.9
In Labour and Monopoly Capital Harry Braverman argues, `In a
society where labour power is purchased and sold, working time becomes sharply
and antagonistically divided from non-working time, and the worker places an
extraordinary value upon this "free" time, while on-the-job time is
regarded as lost and wasted...'10 Everyone has heard people say, `Thank God
it's Friday,' or has hung around waiting to clock off. The weekend, or whatever
time we get off, is `our time' it
is `free time'.
Leisure is seen as something distinct from work, something
to be earned as recompense for a `fair day's work'. The Polish Marxist Franz
Jakubowski writes, `The alienation of labour has the effect of an alienation of
man from man. Social life becomes merely a means for man's
self-preservation'.11 Consequently, `free time' is not really `our time'
either. Braverman develops the point:
But the atrophy of community and the sharp division from the
natural environment leaves a void when it comes to the `free' hours. Thus the
filling of the time away from the job also becomes dependent on the market,
which develops to an enormous degree those passive amusements, entertainments,
and spectacles that suit the restricted circumstances of the city and are
offered as substitutes for life itself. Since they become the means of filling
all the hours of `free' time, they flow profusely from corporate institutions
which have transformed every means of entertainment and `sport' into a
production process for the enlargement of capital...
Braverman adds, `So enterprising is capital that even where
the effort is made by one or another section to find a way to nature, sport or
art through personal activity and amateur or "underground"
innovation, these activities are rapidly incorporated into the market so far is
possible'.12
Let's look at some of the ways in which capitalism
commodifies and distorts the desire for escape and real, human contact which
draws people to sport in the first place.
For instance, one of the often quoted enjoyments of
attending a football game is being part of the crowd. Yet at its best the
`mateyness' of the crowd is a substitute for the genuine fraternal feelings of
human beings. Those feelings can only be fully developed by liberated human
beings who are themselves free, autonomous individuals (and we would argue the
way to achieve such a society is through the collective struggle of the working
class).
Sport, despite the perception of participants and
spectators, belongs to the realm of `unfree activity'. The rationality of
capitalist production, based on commodity exchange, reduces all individuality
to a minimum. It organises and controls people not only in their work but in
their leisure. Adorno writes, `Amusement in advanced capitalism is the
extension of work. It is sought after by those who wish to escape the
mechanised work process, in order to be able to face it again.' Adorno points
out that the promise of sport is the liberation of the body humiliated by
economic interests, the return to the body of a part of the functions of which
it has been deprived by industrial society. `Sport restores to mankind some of
the functions which the machine has taken away from him, but only to regiment
him remorselessly in the service of the machine'.13
Even the human body suffers under the pressure exerted on
individuals to be the `right' shape. The images of what is supposed to be human
beauty are displayed before us daily. For many the desperate search for the
`right' shape results in pain and misery. The reality is that perceptions about
our bodies are socially constructed. They are given meaning by social
relations. For much of human history fatness was to be welcomed because it
signified wealth in a world of hunger. Perceptions of `beauty' have changed
through the ages as even a brief examination of Renaissance paintings will
reveal.
Capitalist competition affects every kind of human
activity intruding into love, play
and all social relations. In sport obsessive repetition who can run fastest, who is the
strongest, who can throw furthest
increases the alienation of the individual. Sports ideology, like all
ideologies, conceals the real structure of productive and social relations
under capitalism. These are of course seen as `natural'. Relations between
individual humans within the sporting institutions are transformed into
material relations between things: scores, machines and records. In the process
human bodies are treated as commodities.
Ideology would have us believe that sportsmen and women are
free and equal. This then justifies them being ranked into different grades.
The hero of this ideology is the `self made' man or woman who attains their
advancement on the basis of their own merit and through their own efforts. The
lesson is that anyone can make it to the top. The reality is rather different.
The teenagers who become professional footballers are not necessarily the `best'
or most talented players. They are often those most prepared to accept the
tight discipline and intensive training demanded of them.
Let two managers of top football teams who are usually
portrayed as representing two different traditions of play one swashbuckling and attacking, the
other dour and defensive speak for
themselves. Tottenham Hotspur manager Bill Nicholson explained that when
seeking new players what he looked at above all was `character': `Training is
vital, repeating and repeating every possible action... I prefer players not to
be too good or clever at other things. It means they concentrate on football.'
He is echoed by Bertie Mee of Arsenal: `We are basically concerned with winning
matches and that means scoring goals. Some players may be exciting to watch
but, in the end, product is what matters. I want a high level of
consistency a man who can produce
it in 35 games out of 42.'
In the spring of 1996 Vincent Hanna wrote in the Guardian:
Suppose someone told you there was a regime in Europe where
agents scoured the country looking for talented young boys, who are taken from
their homes and brought to camps to do menial jobs and train constantly for whom, because of the intense
competition for places, education is cursory. The lucky ones are kept on, bound
under a contract system where they can be bought and sold by employers. The
successful and the bright do very well. But many of the second raters will find
themselves, in their 30s, on the scrap heap and unemployed.
In any other industry this would raise howls of protest.
Yet, as the author notes, `thus does Britain produce "the greatest
football league in the world".'14
Discipline and training in modern sport often equals a
massive distortion of the human body which can lead to all sorts of horrors.
The pressure and the money involved in top class football in Britain have in
recent months produced stories headlining three England internationals' alcohol
problems, and two of those refer to involvement in fairly horrendous domestic abuse.
In these cases it is not an exaggeration to say that in the pursuit of success
the notion of childhood has been destroyed.
In a powerful indictment of the world of women's gymnastics
and figure skating, Joan Ryan reports:
What I found was a story about legal, even celebrated child
abuse. In the dark troughs along the road to the Olympics lay the bodies of
girls who stumbled on the way, broken by the work, pressure and humiliation. I
found a girl whose father left the family when she quit gymnastics at the age
of 13, who scraped her arms and legs with razors to dull her emotional pain and
who needed a two-hour pass from a psychiatric hospital to attend her
high-school graduation. Girls who broke their necks and backs. One who so
desperately sought the perfect, weightless gymnastic body that she starved
herself to death. Others many who became so obsessive about
controlling their weight that they lost control of themselves instead, falling
into the potentially fatal cycle of bingeing on food, then purging by vomiting
or taking laxatives. One who was sexually abused by her coach and one who was
sodomised for four years by the father of a teammate. I found a girl who felt
such shame at not making the Olympic team that she slit her wrists. A skater
who underwent plastic surgery when a judge said her nose was distracting. A
father who handed custody of his daughter over to her coach so she could keep
skating. A coach who fed his gymnasts so little that federation officials had
to smuggle food into their hotel rooms. A mother who hid her child's chicken
pox with make-up so she could compete. Coaches who motivated their athletes by
calling them imbeciles, idiots, pigs, cows.15
Ryan goes on to chart the changes in modern women's gymnastics:
In 1956 the top two Olympic female gymnasts were 35 and 29
years old. In 1968 gold medalist Vera Caslavska of Czechoslovakia was 26 years
old, stood 5 feet 3 inches and weighed 121 pounds (eight stone and nine
pounds). Back then, gymnastics was truly a woman's sport. It was transformed in
1972 when Olga Korbut 17 years
old, 4 feet 11 inches, 85 pounds (six stone and one pound) enchanted the world with her pigtails
and rubber-band body. Four years later 14 year old Nadia Comaneci clutched a
baby doll after scoring the first perfect 10.0 in Olympic history. She was 5
feet tall and weighed 85 pounds (6 stone 1 pound).
The decline in age among American gymnasts since Comaneci's
victory is startling. In 1976 the six US Olympic gymnasts were, on average, 17
and a half years old, stood 5 feet three and a half inches and weighed 106
pounds (seven stone and eight pounds). By the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, the
average US Olympic gymnast was 16 years old, stood 4 feet 9 inches and weighed
83 pounds (five stone and thirteen pounds) a year younger, 6 inches shorter and 23 pounds lighter than
her counterparts of 16 years before.16
From these observations we can conclude that sport is
characterised by: (a) competition
trying to be first, beating an opponent or to do better than others
(setting a new record); (b) the notion of record as central this reflects a society where
everything is measurable and quantifiable; (c) sporting scales of value which
are precise, very hierarchical and obvious to all; (d) training which is
the hard labour of sport. Training is increasingly inhumane, based on
techniques very similar to the production line and involving the same inhumane
workpace.
Yet for all the obvious parallels between these
characteristics and the broad values of capitalism and workplace relations, the
connection between capitalism and sport is commonly rejected. Sport is seen as
a timeless thing, something `as old as the hills'. Yet for the majority of the
time human beings have been on the planet they have not known anything
approximating to modern sport. Primitive societies, on the contrary, saw humans
co-operate together to eke out an existence. Physical exercise was part of day
to day reality rather than something separated from the work process.
Competitive sport emerged with the development of class
societies in which a privileged minority
either a military or religious caste controlled the surplus produced by agricultural societies.
It is, of course, possible to draw links and comparisons with what might be
termed sport in previous societies. But the function they played in those
societies was very different from modern sport and bears little real
resemblance to the activities we describe as sport today.
The ancient Greeks are credited with being the first
organisers of sport on a systematic basis
the Olympic Games which began in 776 AD are often cited as evidence of
this. But Cashman points out:
The games may have been less important as a spectacle than
they were as a focal point around which to organise training. Physical fitness,
strength and the general toughness that derives from competition were important
military attributes, and so the process was tuned to producing warriors as much
as sports performers.17
The Olympics originated as part of a religious festival
dedicated to Zeus. The games were only open to a privileged minority they excluded slaves and women. The
games were closely associated with the development of the state, with warfare
between the states, and with the state internally having a monopoly of
violence:
Powerful Greek city-states needed defence against outside
attacks and they ensured this by encouraging and rewarding warriors.
Accompanying the development of the polis was the growth of the state's control
over human expressions of violence; sophisticated social organisation and
internal security were impossible without some regulation of violence. The
state's response was to obtain a legitimate monopoly over violence and
establish norms of behaviour which discouraged the open expression of violence
by citizens and encouraged saving violence for the possible repulsion of
attacks from outside powers. Contests, challenges, and rivalries were ways in
which the impulse could reassert itself, but in socially acceptable forms.18
In both ancient China and Japan there was activity with a
ball. When Saturday Comes recently carried an article on a form of `keepy
up' kemari traditionally played by Japanese
aristocrats. It was `seen as a sign of breeding, ball control a measure of
social prestige'. It remains so among the 30 ageing Japanese who still `play'
it. It is, however, not competitive. It is played in a costume dating from the
6th century and, after the players kneel as a mark of respect to the ball, the
game continues with the ball being simply passed among the participating males
using headers and volleys. The whole thing seems to be a form of meditation
tied to Buddhist ritual rather different to modern soccer.19
In other societies sport played a similar role. Among Native
Americans lacrosse was often played across several days as a form of ritualised
or substitute warfare.20 Medieval and pre-industrial ball `games' in Britain,
usually played with an inflated pig's bladder, were often melees rather than
games. Those that have continued into the present day suggest they were about
demarcation of boundaries between or in villages with little distinction being
made between spectators and participants. They were conducted according to
custom rather than by fixed rules. There is no obvious connection between these
events and modern games like football and rugby. Even on the eve of the
industrial revolution the work process was largely dictated by the agricultural
seasons while artisans still retained a degree of control over the work
process. There was time for festivals and play, the maypole being one of the
better known examples. As the process of primitive capital accumulation began
climaxing in the industrial revolution these were ruthlessly stamped out.
Historians like Christopher Hill and E P Thompson provide a rich history of
opposition to this process.
Notions of play and physical exercise have changed
throughout history. How could it be otherwise? Many of the institutions that
are portrayed today as timeless are in fact a product of systems of production
whose role and character have changed as ancient society was replaced by
feudalism and as feudalism was replaced by capitalism. The Catholic Church is a
good case in point. Marx criticises those `who fail to see our social institutions
as historical products and understand neither their origin nor their
development'.21 In The German Ideology the point is developed: `All common
institutions are set up with the help of the state and are given a political
form'.22
Football lays claim to being the most popular game in
today's world. Yet its origins lie in the `muscular Christianity' of England's
mid-19th century public schools. Their aim was to turn out `great men' in a
system based on the survival of the fittest. Soccer was codified by ex-public
school boys, the first written rules were drawn up at Cambridge University in
1848, and public school educated men controlled the Football Association when
it was formed in 1863. The original FA Cup winners included Wanderers, Royal
Engineers, Oxford University, Old Etonians, Old Carthusians. This domination by
the public schools was only breached in 1878 when a professional team, Darwen,
first appeared in an FA Cup final. From then on professional teams with working
class players dominated the sport.
When it was a public school/Oxbridge sport, football was
played by young men whose future careers were as bankers, captains of industry
or administrators of empire. They required a high degree of autonomy,
initiative and self discipline. The emphasis then was on individual dribbling
skills. In the very first days of football, prior to 1850, there were no
specialised positions. The first functional division was between defence and
attack. Then the goalkeeper acquired a specialised role. Even the 1863 rules contain
no mention of a goalkeeper that
first appears in revised rules of 1870. Today dribbling plays a very
subordinate role in any major team. Ryan Giggs, for instance, will often be in
direct contact with the ball for only 15 seconds during a normal 90 minute
game.
British football evolved into a traditional pattern of the
long ball game or short stabbing passing movements which stemmed from the need
to play on waterlogged pitches in mid-winter! But it is the technical
conditions of the factory and work, which determine behaviour at the workplace,
which have increasingly been reproduced on the playing field by systems of play
and tactical manoeuvres to which players are supposed to subordinate
themselves.
Football developed in the second half of the 19th century
after industrial production had stabilised from the years earlier in the
century when men, women and children were expected to work long hours in often
appalling conditions. Industrial production required skill and that required a healthy and relatively
content workforce. Saturday afternoon holidays opened the way for popular
sport. A quarter of the Football League's clubs were founded by the churches
keen to grow in the new urban working class areas: Aston Villa grew from a
men's bible class, Birmingham City from Holy Trinity Church, Bolton from Christ
Church, Everton from St Domingo's Congregational Church sunday school.
Industrialists too were quick to see the advantages of
sport. Arsenal was formed from workers at the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich. Other
clubs whose origins lie in works teams include West Ham United (Thames Iron
Works), Manchester United (Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway), and Southampton
(Woolston shipyard), while Sheffield Cutlers became Sheffield United.
Professionalism was made legal in 1885 after years in which it had been tacitly
accepted. This spread of sport into the working class from above was central to
the creation of a `respectable' working class following the upheavals of the
post-Napoleonic and Chartist years.23
Football was quickly spread across the globe by British
engineers, soldiers, factory owners and missionaries (witness Anglicised names
like Newells Old Boys in Buenos Areas and AC Milan in Italy). But though soccer
may have been played by workers, it was always as a professional game
controlled and directed by the upper classes.
Capital by the mid-19 century was shifting away from the
methods of exploitation associated with the industrial revolution. It
increasingly required a skilled or semi-skilled workforce provided with a
modicum of education, health provision and `rest'. The employers were not slow
to see how these could be used to discipline the working class. Looking back to
this period, Ellis Cashman writes:
Behaviour at work was subject to rules and conditions of
service. Usually all the work took place in a physically bounded space, the
factory. There was also a need for absoluteness: tools and machines were made
to fine tolerances. Underlying all this was a class structure, or hierarchy, in
which some strata had attributes suited to ruling and others to being ruled.
The latter's shortcomings were so apparent that no detailed investigation of
the causes was thought necessary: their poverty, or even destitution, was their
own fault.
All these had counterparts in the developing sports scene.
Time periods for contests were established and measured accurately thanks to
newer sophisticated timepieces. Divisions of labour in team games yielded
role-specific positions and particular, as opposed to general, skills.
Constitutions were drawn up to instil more structure into activities and
regulate events according to rules. They took place on pitches, in rings, in
halls in finite spaces. Winners
and losers were unambiguously clear, outright and absolute. And hierarchies
reflecting the class structure were integrated into many activities.24
Given its origins
and particularly the spread of games like soccer, cricket and baseball
which came with the rise of imperialism
the connection between sport and nationalism has always been close. The
Turner Movement, the championing of a system of gymnastics and physical
exercises devised by Friedrich Jahn, was associated with the creation of German
national unity against Napoleonic occupation. Jahn argued that gymnastics was
about `protecting youth from softness and excess in order to keep them sturdy
for the coming struggle for the fatherland'. Official schools' gymnastic
manuals of 1862 and 1868 prescribe exercises modelled on Prussian military
drill regulations of 1847. Marching in ranks and columns, turning on the march,
wheeling, division into sections, etc were to be practiced under the eye of the
gymnastics teacher. These moves were bitterly opposed by the German socialists.
Modern imperialism means more than extending the influence
of capitalists from the major powers overseas. It also means sinking deeper
roots among the working class at home so that they can be mobilised behind the
imperial project. The development of modern sport coincided with the extension
of the franchise, a key stage in this process. In 1866 a Tory government under
Disraeli took the `leap in the dark' by extending the franchise for the first
time to workers though still on a
very restricted basis. Prior to then, parliamentary politics at Westminster had
essentially been restricted to a small number of ruling class patricians. From
1866 the Tories began to build themselves into a mass membership party. The
ruling class had to develop new ideological tools to establish control over the
masses. In Britain this would have included the development of the popular
press with the launch of the Daily Mail.
This coincided with the rise of imperialism. Imperialism was
not only a question of the subjection of the colonial populations. For Lenin
and other Marxists imperialism was important as a means of ideologically tying
the masses to their own ruling class through the ideas of nationalism and
racism. Organised sport originated in the imperialist nations they drew up the rules and formed the
governing bodies in the years between 1860 and 1890. C L R James in Beyond a
Boundary shows how cricket was used in the British West Indies to disseminate
ideas central to maintaining colonial rule across British colonies. Cricket was
spread across Britain's empire just as US imperialism ensured baseball became
the national sport of Cuba, Puerto Rico, Mexico and much of Central America.
An examination of when modern sport was regulated and
codified gives some evidence of its link to modern industrial capitalism and
the state. In fact the process of regulation was closely associated with the
rise of imperialism. The Football Association was founded in 1863; Rugby Union
in 1871 (Rugby League split in 1895). Across the Atlantic Baseball's National
League was founded in 1876. Three years afterwards six day cycle races began in
Europe. The invention of the modern Olympic Games by Baron Pierre de
Coubertin the first games were
held in Athens in 1896 owed
something to the English public school tradition but flowed rather more directly
from the Franco-Prussian War. Coubertin was convinced after visiting England
that Arnold's methods at Rugby school had been part of the rise of British
power in the 19th century and that these had to be transplanted to France.
Coubertin also saw physical health as being necessary to win wars. If France
was to overcome its defeat in the Franco-Prussian War physical education had to
become central to the education system.
In the imperialist countries sport played an important role
in bolstering a nationalism which had previously often had only a tenuous hold
on popular consciousness. The Tour de France helped create the idea of a French
nation state just as football in Italy became a symbol of an Italian
nationalism which, prior to the First World War, had been extremely fragile.
Under dictatorships we can see the naked role of sport in
our society and its clear connection to nationalism. The 1936 Berlin Olympics
were the first to be televised. The games themselves were transformed into a
mass propaganda event. Today the 1936 games are best remembered for the slap in
the face that the black American athlete Jesse Owen gave Nazism by winning four
gold medals. But the impact of Hitler's propaganda should not be ignored. One
Uruguayan journalist recalled: `Everything was organised towards a political
end...to show a brilliant Germany... Their effort was a triumph for them
because people left enchanted with the country and the treatment they had
received'.25
Of course the claim is often made that bringing athletes
together promotes peace. In his history of the Olympics, Olympic Politics,
Christopher R Hill points out:
If this is taken to mean that athletic competition promotes
a camaraderie which inhibits hostility there is not much evidence to support it
in top level sport. High level sport is now so closely linked with large sums
of hard cash that there is little room for friendship, and investigation of the
idea that interaction on the sports field produces friendly feelings has shown
that the thesis is by no means necessarily true, at any level.
He then points out,
[that] nearly every celebration of the [Olympic] Games has
been marked by acrimony or worse and the recollections of contretemps or
disaster long outlive the warm glow of competitive interaction. A catalogue
would be tedious, but it is worth remembering that other Games than those held
in Berlin in 1936 have provoked international outrage. For example, 1968 saw a
massacre by the Mexican government of young people who thought the Games a
waste of money. Israeli athletes were murdered by Palestinians at the Munich
Games of 1972 when the outgoing President of the International Olympic
Committee, Avery Brundage, decided that `The Games must go on'. In 1976
numerous African states boycotted the Games in protest against a rugby tour of
South Africa undertaken by a New Zealand side.26
Since then that catalogue has continued with the next
olympic games in Moscow witnessing a boycott over the Russian invasion of
Afghanistan.
The same pattern is also observable in other international
sports events. The first World Cup final played in Montevideo in 1930 saw the
Uruguayan home side come from 2-0 down against Argentina to win the tournament
4-2. In the city that night the home supporters rejoiced. But across the
border, `in Buenos Aires, the defeated Argentinians raged; mobs took to the
streets, even stoning the Uruguayan consulate, and diplomatic relations between
the countries were broken off'.27
Sport then is totally integrated into a framework of
inter-state rivalry, capitalist production and class relations. As an ideology,
transmitted on a huge scale by the media, it is part and parcel of ruling
bourgeois ideology. The hierarchical structure of sport reflects the social
structure of capitalism and its system of competitive selection, promotion,
hierarchy and social advancement. The driving forces in sport performance, competitiveness, records are mirrors of the driving forces of
capitalist production.
John Hargreaves argues that organised sport helps train a
`docile labour force' with the discipline necessary for modern capitalism.
Comparing sport and industry, he notes `a high degree of specialisation and
standardisation, bureaucratised and hierarchical administration, long term
planning, increased reliance on science and technology, a drive for maximum
productivity and, above all, the alienation of both producer and consumer'.28
He adds that `sport is produced, packaged and sold like any other commodity on
the market for mass consumption at enormous profits'.29 And he argues that
sport expresses in a concentrated form bourgeois ideology (aggressive
individualism, ruthless competitiveness, elitism, chauvinism, sexism and
racism) and that its bureaucratic administration is linked closely to the
capitalist state.
But Hargreaves is aware that by concentrating large numbers
of people together capitalism can create the conditions in which disorder and
opposition can grow. Commenting on the crowd he argues, `It is precisely this
type of solidarity that historically has formed the basis for a trenchant
opposition to employers'.30
Recently the police have opened fire on a football crowd in
Libya, killing many people, after they began chanting opposition to the regime
of Colonel Gadaffi. In Spain under Franco hatred of Real Madrid and support for
Barcelona could both signal opposition to the regime. There have also been
examples of participants using sporting occasions to make a political protest.
The most potent was by the two black Americans who finished first and second in
the 200 metres at the 1968 Olympics. As they stood on the podium, and as the
national anthem was played, both raised a fist in the black power salute (and
both were barred from athletics as a result).
Socialists should have no qualms about supporting any such
manifestations. From its inception the Anti Nazi League sought sponsorship from
sports personalities and campaigned against racism on the football terraces.
That campaign helped spawn a number of local initiatives at football clubs,
often linked to fanzines. In 1996 this all culminated in the launch of a `Let's
Kick Racism Out Of Football' campaign sponsored by the Commission for Racial
Equality and the Professional Footballers Association.
Yet we should be careful about exaggerating the general
importance of these examples. The main anger of a football crowd is directed
against the opposing players and their supporters. That anger can take the form
of the worst kinds of verbal abuse, and sometimes of physical violence.
In Britain, recent years have seen a number of rebellions
against the boards of directors at a number of football clubs. Yet this too has
its contradictions. At Tottenham Hotspur the ousting of the manager and
director, Terry Venables, by the club's owner, millionaire Alan Sugar, saw a
number of protests on Venables' behalf by Spurs fans. Yet it is hard to see
either figure as representing the fans' best interests. At Celtic in Glasgow a
highly successful campaign by fans succeeded in ousting the old Catholic middle
class families who had run the club since its inception and whose lack of
vision and investment had seen the club trail their rivals, Rangers. Yet many
Celtic fans must have experienced the strange sensation of knowing that what
was really necessary was for the club to be taken over by someone, or some
multinational, which could give an even bigger injection of cash than Rangers
had received in order to create success on the field. That, of course, would
inevitably entail the club following others in promoting overpriced
merchandising and introducing seat prices which would prohibit most working
class fans from attending matches with any regularity. Competition has its own
logic.
Sport without competition, on and off the field, is a
contradiction in terms. It is a tyranny over human effort by machines, the
watch, and arbitrary rules. This is as true of `team' sports as of `individual'
sports. Some argue sport can be about competing against oneself as if Robinson Crusoe his on desert
island were to try to set a new record for running round the island or for
outswimming a shark! But such arguments are not only entirely implausible, they
also miss the point. The main point goes to the fundamental question of human
nature and of socialism. In sport the element of play has increasingly
disappeared. Ellul argues:
We are witnessing a process whereby playfulness and joy,
contact with air and water, improvisation and spontaneity, are disappearing:
all these things are abandoned in favour of obedience to strict rules,
efficiency and record times. Training turns men and children into efficient
machines who know no other joy other than the grim satisfaction of mastering
and exploiting their own bodies.31
Former Spurs captain Mike England, in Hunter Davies's The
Glory Game, states: `I never say I'm going to play football. It's work.' No one
was playing in Euro 96, the Olympics or at the last World Cup.
Socialists want to rescue the element of play in leisure.
Capitalism creates a large class of people engaged in sedentary labour who need
physical activity as a diversion. And it creates a specialisation of labour
where even those engaged in physical labour develop only those physical
attributes which are useful for production. Socialism will abolish this set-up
and create the conditions for the free development of the human body. Under
socialism there will be physical recreation but not sport.
Sport does not equal all physical activity. Sport is one way
of being physically active. But it is increasingly an artificial means of
achieving fitness. The result in professional (and increasingly amateur) sport
often becomes the physical distortion of the human body in pursuit of a record.
Take this example:
June 18 1994, the body of 22 year old Russian, Aleksandr
Popov, breaks the water of a pool at Monaco, Monte Carlo. Moments later, Popov
fully surfaces, having travelled 100 meters through water faster than any other
human. In 48.21 seconds, Popov has set in motion processes and mechanisms of
immense complexity: for 61 strokes, his every muscle contracted, stretched and
twisted; his lungs have filled and emptied repeatedly; his heart has pumped
about 6.6 gallons (30 litres) of blood into all areas of the body.32
In order to achieve this new record Popov had reduced his
body to an intricate machine. At what cost? Who will remember him in ten or 20
years time? What will a 42 year old Aleksandr be like?
Brohm talks of `the total, not to say totalitarian
mobilisation of the athletes to produce maximum performance. Every sport now
involves a fantastic manipulation of human robots by doctors, psychologists,
bio-chemists and trainers. The "manufacturing of champions" is no
longer a craft but an industry, calling on specialised laboratories, research
institutes, training camps and experimental sports centres'.33 Taking drugs to
enhance performance, far from being a new phenomenon arose at the same time as
professional sport came to be used as an expression of newly minted imperial
rivalries:
...after 1879 when six day cycle races began in Europe,
riders favoured ether and caffeine to delay the onset of fatigue sensations.
Sprint cyclists used nitroglycerine, a chemical later used in conjunction with
heroin, cocaine, strychnine, and others to make `speedballs' which were given
to racehorses before races in the 1930s. The highly poisonous strychnine was
also used by the winner of the 1904 Olympic marathon.34
There is not a qualitative difference between using drugs to
artificially enhance performance and the physical abuse inflicted on the body
by other means.
There are of course certain contradictory elements in
sport witness popular opposition
to the police among football crowds. At best these are an inarticulate and misdirected
protest against capitalism. But even these are rare. Even the love of being in
a crowd reflects the atomisation and lack of community we suffer under
capitalism, a pale reflection of what real human solidarity would be like. The
buzz, the excitement, comes because people see it as a break from the mundane
reality of everyday life. But the buzz goes quickly and it isn't a break from
capitalist reality.
Trotsky once had occasion to refer to how the creative
potential of working class people is caricatured by popular pastimes. Writing
on Britain, Trotsky points out, `The revolution will inevitably awaken in the
English working class the most unusual passions, which have been hitherto been
so artificially held down and turned aside, with the aid of social training,
the church, the press, in the artificial channels of boxing, football, racing
and other sports'.35 Elsewhere he adds, `In the sphere of philanthropy,
amusements and sports, the bourgeoisie and the church are incomparatively
stronger than we are. We cannot tear away the working class youth from them
except by means of the socialist programme and revolutionary action'.36
The one attempt at starting to construct a socialist society
took place in the terrible conditions of post First World War Russia. It was
strangled at birth by Stalinist counter-revolution. Yet the debates which
occupied the Bolsheviks retain their relevance. Trotsky, in Problems Of
Everyday Life, attempted to deal with the issue of creating not just a new
society but new men and women. There is little or no mention of sport because
in the primitive stage of Russian society this scarcely existed for the Russian
working class. Nevertheless, there are three points which have some bearing on
sport:
(1) The question of amusements in this connection becomes of
greatly enhanced importance in regard to culture and education. The character
of the child is revealed and formed in its play. The character of an adult is
clearly manifested in his play and amusements... The longing for amusement,
distraction, sightseeing and laughter is the most legitimate desire of human
nature. We are able, and indeed obliged, to give the satisfaction of this
desire a higher artistic quality, at the same time making amusement a weapon of
collective education...37
(2) Everyone knows that physical requirements are very much
more limited than spiritual ones. An excessive gratification of physical
requirements quickly leads to satiety. Spiritual requirements, however, know no
frontiers. But in order that spiritual requirements may flourish it is
necessary that physical requirements be fully satisfied.38
(3) ...meaningless ritual, which lies on the consciousness
like an inert burden, cannot be destroyed by criticism alone; it can be
supplanted by new forms of life, new amusements, new and more cultured
theatres.39
The case for socialism rests on the idea that humans can be
co-operative not competitive. Pre-class societies abound with such examples.
The French paper Socialisme Internationale recently told of Jacques Meunier's
description of a game played by the Mor‚s Indians in Amazonia: `The player who
scores automatically changes team. In that way the winners are weakened and
those who are losing are reinforced. The score equalises in this way'.40
In a socialist society we will not be alienated from work, from leisure, from nature.
Indeed the divisions between these things would cease to exist. For the first
time we would have `the right to be lazy' . William Morris subtitled News From
Nowhere an `Epoch of Rest' in which we would be free to enjoy `the light of the
world'. It would be a world in which there are endless possibilities. Most
people prefer swimming in a warm sea to a chlorine saturated swimming pool.
Interestingly, swimming in the sea is fun, because people indulge in play,
rather than in trying to outdo each other. In contrast swimming pools are
increasingly laned-off and extremely competitive, intimidating people who want
a leisurely swim up and down and making it impossible for a family or a group of
friends to play.
Socialism will not be a society where 22 men still play
football (far less where another 30,000 people will pay to watch them) or men
and women crash up and down a swimming pool competing against each other and
the clock. Physical recreation and play are about the enjoyment of one's body,
human company and the environment. Sport is not. It is about competing, doing
better than the next person, being the best. It is about obeying arbitrary
rules an ideal preparation for the
capitalist productive process.
Naturally socialists understand why people take part in or
watch sport. It is an escape from the harsh world in which we live. That is why
we do not ignore sport. Rather socialists campaign, for instance, against
racism on the terraces and seek the support of sports men and women for such
campaigns. Neither would socialists dream of banning or prohibiting
participation in sports. But socialists should follow the example of the
Bolsheviks in pulling out of all sports competitions based on nationalism, such
as the Olympics. Our aim is human liberation and a world of truly endless
possibilities, a world in which future generations will look back in wonder at
something like the Olympics and ask only one question Why?
Notes
1 Social
Trends 25 (HMSO, 1995), p220.
2 Ibid,
p224.
3 The
Independent, 16 September 1996.
4 The
Guardian, 26 June 1996.
5 When
Saturday Comes, May 1996.
6 Financial
Times, 26 June 1996.
7 G
Hodgson, The People's Century (BBC Books, 1995), p128.
8 K
Marx, Capital vol I (Lawrence and Wishart, 1974), p398.
9 K
Marx, `The Poverty of Philosophy'in Marx and Engels Collected Works Vol VI
(Lawrence and Wishart, 1975), p127.
10 H
Braverman, Labour and Monopoly Capitalism (Monthly Review Press, 1974), p278.
11 F
Jakubowski, Ideology and Superstructure in Historical Materialism (Pluto Press,
1990), p86.
12 H
Braverman, op cit, pp278-279.
13 Quoted
in J-M Brohm, Sport: A Prison of Measured Time (Pluto Press, 1989), p56.
14 The
Guardian, 8 May 1996.
15 J
Ryan, Little Girls in Pretty Boxes (Women's Press, 1996), pp3-4.
16 Ibid,
p58.
17 E
Cashman, Making Sense of Sports (Routledge, 1996), p60.
18 Ibid,
pp60-61.
19 When
Saturday Comes, May 1996.
20 See
The Guardian's Notes and Queries column, 11 September 1996.
21 K
Marx, `Letter to P Annenkov, 1846', in Marx and Engels' Selected Works
(Lawrence and Wishart, 1970), p663.
22 K
Marx and F Engels, The German Ideology (Progress Publishers, 1976), p99.
23 J
Hargreaves, Sport, Power and Ideology (Routledge Kegan and Paul, 1982).
24 E
Cashman, op cit, p73.
25 G
Hodgson, op cit, p144.
26 C
R Hill, Olympic Politics (Manchester University Press, 1992), pp35-36.
27 G
Hodgson, op cit, p123.
28 J
Hargreaves, op cit, p41.
29 Ibid,
p41.
30 Ibid,
p110.
31 Quoted
in J-M Brohm, op cit, p41.
32 E
Cashman, op cit, p23.
33 J-M
Brohm, op cit, p18.
34 E
Cashman, op cit, p145.
35 L
Trotsky, Writings On Britain vol II (New Park, 1974), p123.
36 L
Trotsky, Whither France (Pathfinder Press, 1968), p102.
37 L
Trotsky, Problems of Everyday Life (Pathfinder Press, 1994), p32.
38 Ibid,
p24.
39 Ibid,
p34.
40 Socialisme
International 104, 19 June-3 July 1996.
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