The Football Paradox: Religion, Nationalism and Globalisation
By (Author) Aaron W. Hughes
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
5th March 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Sociology: sport and leisure
World Cups and World championships
Globalization
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
By examining football, and exploring the religious, economic, and political forces that interact with the sport, this book argues that this global game becomes a prism through which we can view and understand the world we inhabit.
With over three billion fans in the world, football has a larger following than either Christianity or Islam, the worlds two largest religions, and in this book, Aaron W. Hughes illustrates how football and religion function in our increasingly globalized world. Conversely, the book considers how our globalized world has changed our understanding of both football and religion.
Hughes situates football within the larger discourse of religion and sports, paying attention to some of the sociological features of sport and showing how football can function as a modern religion, especially in the context of the postmodern urban landscape. Drawing upon a set of case studies and examples from the MENA region, Europe, and North and South America, and using theoretical frameworks from religious studies and global studies, each chapter highlights common themes and articulates questions for future research.
Through case studies, such as 2022 World Cup in Qatar, this book highlights how the sport has increasingly become an important arena for soft power, sportswashing, female empowerment, and the symbolic construction of cultural belonging, whether inclusive or exclusive.
This book builds on existing case studies in the field of football and makes the case for the creation of a new subfield called football studies within the academic study of religion.
Aaron W. Hughes is the Philip S. Bernstein Chair in the Department of Religion and Classics at the University of Rochester, USA.