Commercial Mythmaking and the Gaelic Athletic Association: Exploring Irish Men’s Identity Work Within Influential Social Networks

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

This paper explores young men’s engagement with Irish sporting and cultural organisation, the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA), to show how the interrelations and influences of one’s social network or human interdependencies all serve as potential cues on which individuals learn to construct their identity projects. This research engages Foucauldian theory to consider the effects of power emanating from multiple sources (to include the influence of peers, family, community, mass media and social institutions) on the individual. By looking at the intricacies of mundane everyday practices, such as the participation in sport, allows a better understanding of how individuals actually come to constitute their sense of self. In particular this paper explores how young men use commercially mediated mythologies to negotiate their membership with the GAA social network. Findings show a marked contrast in men’s engagement with mythical GAA mediated material across the membership spectrum. Peripheral members invest more readily in the ideological narrative and utilize the marketplace articulations in their own narratives of identity. Whereas embedded members, those men who actually commit their lives to this amateur sport, resist mythic rhetoric and engage ‘demythologising practices’ to distinguish their immense investment in this consumption field from a (potentially) devaluing marketplace myth.
Original languageEnglish
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014
EventMyth and the Market Conference - Carlingford, Ireland
Duration: 19 Jun 201421 Jun 2014

Conference

ConferenceMyth and the Market Conference
Country/TerritoryIreland
CityCarlingford
Period19/06/1421/06/14
Othercompetitive paper

Keywords

  • Irish sporting
  • cultural organisation
  • Gaelic Athletic Association
  • social network
  • identity projects
  • Foucauldian theory
  • power
  • peers
  • family
  • community
  • mass media
  • social institutions
  • mundane everyday practices
  • participation in sport
  • sense of self
  • commercially mediated mythologies
  • GAA social network
  • mythical GAA mediated material
  • membership spectrum
  • ideological narrative
  • marketplace articulations
  • narratives of identity
  • embedded members
  • amateur sport
  • mythic rhetoric
  • demythologising practices
  • consumption field
  • marketplace myth

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