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Articles

Playing Nostalgic Language Games in Sport Research: Conceptual Considerations and Methodological Musings

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 517-532 | Published online: 26 Feb 2019
 

ABSTRACT

As researchers interested in social aspects of sport, we enmesh ourselves in the work of memory, (re)membering and forms of “capturing” sport and sport experiences. While nostalgia is at play in these social constructions of sport, for researchers, we contend that the concept of nostalgia can prove devious. In this article, we illustrate the social significance afforded to nostalgic experiences or events, and consider their representation in social sciences sport research. We develop and apply arguments concerning the senses, nostalgia, and language in line with the “abilities” view of concepts. The consequences of nostalgia can, we contend, be underplayed, taken for granted and/or ignored by sport researchers in ways that curtail more critical readings of sport phenomena. Our purpose is to interrogate the construction and a/effects of nostalgia as hidden/implicit/latent and heuristic. We advocate methodological critique that addresses the elusive, apparent, “capturable” and confusing nature of nostalgia within sport research.

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