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          <guid isPermaLink="true">https://worldsoccertalk.com/news/black-arsenal-book-explores-clubs-relationship-to-black-culture/</guid>
          <title>Black Arsenal book explores club’s relationship to black culture</title>
          <link><![CDATA[https://worldsoccertalk.com/news/black-arsenal-book-explores-clubs-relationship-to-black-culture/]]></link>
          <pubDate>Mon, 16 Sep 2024 19:20:03 -0400</pubDate>
          <description><![CDATA[Dr Clive Chijioke Nwonka and Matthew Harle’s much-anticipated new book, Black Arsenal: Club, Culture, Identity, can be essential. In what already feels like a vital, seminal text, Black Arsenal weaves together insight from professors, artists, fans, coaches, photographers, ex-players, and journalists alike, in charting Arsenal Football Club’s pioneering relationship with Black British culture in the […] <p>Dr Clive Chijioke Nwonka and Matthew Harle’s much-anticipated new book, <em>Black Arsenal: Club, Culture, Identity</em>, can be essential. In what already feels like a vital, seminal text, <em>Black Arsenal</em> weaves together insight from professors, artists, fans, coaches, photographers, ex-players, and journalists alike, in charting Arsenal Football Club’s pioneering relationship with Black British culture in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. </p>



<p>The book foregrounds Arsenal football club in prescient, fascinating accounts and discussions of contemporary British culture. Time and time again, the book details how <a href="https://worldsoccertalk.com/teams/arsenal-tv-schedule/">Arsenal Football Club</a> has been a cultural touchstone. People have felt at home within a fan base and felt represented by their heroes on the pitch. The book seeks to commemorate and explore how Arsenal has been, and remains, a place where Black Britishness can be celebrated.</p>



<p><em>Black Arsenal</em> uses excellent contributions from Arsenal icons like Ian Wright, Paul Davis, Amy Lawrence, and Clive Palmer. In doing so, the book highlights, beyond equivocation, that football is not just a microcosm that responds to and mimics wider cultural norms. Instead, <em>football is the culture</em>. The book employs decades of research to highlight that wider society has a firm eye on the terraces. That perfectly conveys how huge, necessary, progressive, societal change can come from football’s undeniable incubator of influence.</p>



<h2><em>Black Arsenal</em> identifies the best and worst in soccer fandom</h2>



<p>However, to this end, <em>Black Arsenal</em> highlights how this relationship can go two ways. <a href="https://www.weidenfeldandnicolson.co.uk/titles/clive-chijioke-nwonka/black-arsenal/9781399613736/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">The book</a> “does not claim that Arsenal has a model relationship to Black identity.” Soccer, more generally, still has a lot of work to do. At grounds all over the country, and even in my beloved Clock End, you still hear echoes of discrimination. Misogynistic, xenophobic or homophobic chants pop out on rare occasions. Moreover, as the book details, it feels ever-harder for meaningful culture to win out in the hyper-sanitized, hyper-capitalistic product that <a href="https://worldsoccertalk.com/premier-league-tv-schedule/">Premier League</a> football has become.</p>



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<p>But, through <em>Black Arsenal</em>, Dr. Clive Chijioke Nwonka and Matthew Harle have re-injected meaning and hope into the broader discussion of the fan-club relationship. I would love to see a ‘domino effect’ in which similar texts are produced about the urgent, sensitive, complicated, beautiful relationship. Football clubs have broader socio-cultural subjects and identities.</p>



<p>At its heart, this book is a reminder of just how much football matters to people. It is significant for the game to let people feel seen and heard in their authentic selves. It is a fascinating historical study of the people, events, and moments. These lead to a culture being born and consolidated. “By accident and design, Arsenal led the way” in instilling a culture of inclusivity and progressivity.</p>



<h2>Arsenal stands as a beacon for society</h2>



<p>If the poignant, necessary sentiment of the book needed any further stressing, <em>Black Arsenal</em> opens with a beautiful dedication to legends David Rocastle and Kevin Campbell. A message reads “You did so much for us.” In just six words, a timeless, essential spirit is captured; footballing Gods like Rocastle and Campbell did so much for the game we love, but also for the day-to-day experiences of the fans who adored them. Especially those who see a piece of themselves in these heroes, and in the people surrounding them on the terraces.</p>



<p>I wholeheartedly recommend this book. That applies to anyone with a passing interest in soccer, or, indeed, in culture. To be fair, it is hard to disentangle the two. </p>



<p><em>PHOTOS: IMAGO</em>.</p>
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          <dc:creator><![CDATA[Henry Waddon]]></dc:creator>
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          <title>It&#039;s still Thierry Henry&#039;s world. We&#039;re still just living in it</title>
          <link><![CDATA[https://worldsoccertalk.com/news/its-still-thierry-henrys-world-were-still-just-living-in-it/]]></link>
          <pubDate>Thu, 15 Aug 2024 15:36:09 -0400</pubDate>
          <description><![CDATA[It takes a very special kind of individual to generate a heart-aching nostalgia for an era that you do not even remember. It takes a special, special player to instill a yearning for a period of soccer history that transpired before you were even born, and before you were even conceived. But in the never-ending […] <p>It takes a very special kind of individual to generate a heart-aching nostalgia for an era that you do not even remember. It takes a special, special player to instill a yearning for a period of soccer history that transpired before you were even born, and before you were even conceived.</p>



<p>But in the never-ending list of adjectives you can attribute to arguably the greatest player to ever don an <a href="https://worldsoccertalk.com/teams/arsenal-tv-schedule/">Arsenal</a> shirt, ‘special’ is one of the most apt to describe Le Roi. Thierry Henry.</p>



<h2>Henry created magical moments at Arsenal</h2>



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<p>This month marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Frenchman’s signing for Arsenal FC. To mark the occasion, the club shared a series of Henry’s best moments for the North London team. A carousel of sentimentality-inducing dopamine rushes. </p>



<p>Schooling Galacticos at the Bernabeu, single-handledly rearing a remontada against <a href="https://worldsoccertalk.com/teams/liverpool-tv-schedule/">Liverpool</a>, and adorning the Premier League trophy on his head at the finale of the Invincibles season. Life is infinite and so is the stockpile of iconic Thierry Henry stills.</p>



<p>Henry’s legacy as an all-time Premier League great is unquestionable. In conversations about the best to play in the Premier League, it’s a cardinal sin to not mention his name. He did things on the pitch that have never, ever, ever come close to being recreated. </p>



<p>His gobsmacking flick-turn-volley against <a href="https://worldsoccertalk.com/teams/manchester-united-tv-schedule/">Manchester United</a>, an audacious 10-yard back-heeled finish against Charlton, and the dummy after faint after shimmy before slotting one past a helpless Jerzy Dudek. Henry ignited the excitement of thousands of school-aged kids, who consequently dedicated hours to practicing side-foot finishes and travelas in the back garden.</p>



<h2>His legacy at the Emirates is unforgettable</h2>



<p>But those kids grew up and seasons changed. Henry moved onto sunnier pastures, going on to claim the coveted Champions League trophy at <a href="https://worldsoccertalk.com/teams/barcelona-tv-schedule/">Barcelona</a>. In his absence, Arsenal continued to falter, and cynicism crept into the hearts of even the most ardent fans.</p>



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<p>But The King had more Jokers in his pack. His legendary, tears-in-your-eyes goal against Leeds on his return to the Emirates catapulted us back to the cobwebbed corners of our memory. Not since elementary school had the urge to grab a worn-out soccer ball and tear around the back garden been so irresistibly strong.</p>



<p>He was signed in the twilight of a decade that birthed the footballer/mega-celebrity hybrid. Thierry Henry’s influence and significance have always far transcended the game we love. </p>



<p>In recent years, Arsenal players like Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Bukayo Saka have continued to emulate his most famous celebrations; an aura-dripping, fist-clenching knee-slide in the North London derby. Or a naughty smile while lazily leaning on the corner flag, a tribute to the Thierry Henry nineties exploits in a France jersey. Football is the Culture. And Thierry Henry is the Football.</p>



<p>Twenty-five years on, his relevance remains relentless. During the season, the timeline is inundated with bi-weekly clips of Le Roi utilizing his sophisticated, charismatic aura to rip the p*** out of Micah Richards and Jamie Carragher (much like he used to do on the football pitch). </p>



<h2>Thierry Henry has led France to an Olympics final</h2>



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<p>More to the point, he continues to have a direct managerial influence on the beautiful game. At the time of writing, Henry guided a young French Men’s team to a silver medal at the Paris Olympics.</p>



<p>And much like his footballing nouse, Henry’s instinct for iconography is not greying or fraying with age. In the dying embers of the semi-final, <a href="https://x.com/worldsoccertalk/status/1820570488919503221" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Thierry Henry posed with his arms aloft to the heavens</a> as pure limbs broke out in the France stands after a late Mateta winner. </p>



<p>It isn’t long before there are videos on my feed of <a href="https://x.com/JulienCst/status/1820589295066890351" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Thierry Henry dancing</a>. He spins with a characteristic nonchalant joy in the France dressing room. A hero, coach, and peer alike to this future cohort of French soccer stars.</p>



<p>These images reassure me, if any reassurance was necessary, that Thierry Henry’s legacy is eternal. My children will know Thierry Henry. So will my children’s children, and every generation of footballing fans that comes after them. Just as I am stood staring at photos that are a quarter-of-a-century old today.</p>



<p>The world is a better place for Thierry Henry. And it’s his world after all. Viva la Va Va Voom.</p>



<p><em>PHOTOS: IMAGO / Geoff Martin</em></p>
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