From Zinedine Zidane to Michael Jordan and from Marie-José Pérec to
Lance Armstrong, over the last thirty years, numerous individuals have
emerged through the global sports industry to capture the imagination of
the French public and become touchstones for the discussion of a host of
social issues. This book provides new insights into the evolution of the
global sporting spectacle through a study of star athletes, emblematic
organisations, key locations, and celebrated moments in French sport
from the mid-1980s to the present day. It draws on a wide range of
sources, from film, television, advertising, newspapers, and popular
music to cover key developments in sports including football,
motorsport, basketball, and cycling. Sport here emerges as a privileged
site for the discussion of the nature of contemporary nationhood, as
well as for the performance of France's postcolonial heritage.
Simultaneously, sport provides a platform for the playing out of
concerns over globalisation,
and, in a time of post-industrial uncertainty, for nostalgic
reminiscences of an apocryphal bygone era of social cohesion. The
exploration of these themes leads to new understandings of the ways
sport influences and is implicated in broader social and cultural
concerns in France today.