WOODHOUSE, Donna, FIELDING-LLOYD, Beth and SEQUERRA, Ruth (2019). Big brother’s little sister: the ideological construction of women’s super league. Sport in Society. [Article]
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Woodhouse-BigBrother'sLittleSister(AM).pdf - Accepted Version
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Woodhouse-BigBrother'sLittleSister(AM).pdf - Accepted Version
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Abstract
This article explores the structure and culture of the Football Association
(FA) in relation to the development of England’s first semiprofessional
female soccer league—Women’s Super League (WSL). Through observations
and interviews, we examined the planning and operationalization
of WSL. Drawing on critical feminist literature and theories of
organizational change, we demonstrate the FA’s shift from tolerance of
the women’s game, through opposition, to defining and controlling
elite female club football as a new product shaped by traditional conceptualizations
of gender. The labyrinthine structures of the FA abetted
the exclusion of pre-WSL stakeholders, allowing the FA to fashion a
League imagined as both qualitatively different to elite men’s football
in terms of style of play, appealing to a different fan base, yet inextricably
bound to men’s clubs for support. It concludes by providing recommendations
for how organizational change might offer correctives to the
FA approach to developing WSL.
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