Samba soccer : fan culture and national mythology

This thesis focuses on the attempts to build a uniquely Singaporean football culture that was prompted by the birth of the S-League in 1996. Before the formation of S-League, Singapore had achieved qualified successes in the ASEAN and Malaysia Cups on the regional and local levels which helped to ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tsang, Yuk Tim
Other Authors: Scott Michael Anthony
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76643
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author Tsang, Yuk Tim
author2 Scott Michael Anthony
author_facet Scott Michael Anthony
Tsang, Yuk Tim
author_sort Tsang, Yuk Tim
collection NTU
description This thesis focuses on the attempts to build a uniquely Singaporean football culture that was prompted by the birth of the S-League in 1996. Before the formation of S-League, Singapore had achieved qualified successes in the ASEAN and Malaysia Cups on the regional and local levels which helped to maintain a sizeable following. With the breakaway from Malaysia Cup at the end of 1994, Singapore football was at risk of decline and irrelevance as Malaysia Cup was the main competition that Singapore contested in on an annual basis. However, efforts from the local football community, government and players proved invaluable to the continuation of Singapore football in the infant stages of the new league as could be seen from the articles published by local football magazines like GOAL! and SAMBA SOCCER and newspapers of The Straits Times and The New Paper.
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spelling ntu-10356/766432019-12-10T13:07:57Z Samba soccer : fan culture and national mythology Tsang, Yuk Tim Scott Michael Anthony School of Humanities DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Culture This thesis focuses on the attempts to build a uniquely Singaporean football culture that was prompted by the birth of the S-League in 1996. Before the formation of S-League, Singapore had achieved qualified successes in the ASEAN and Malaysia Cups on the regional and local levels which helped to maintain a sizeable following. With the breakaway from Malaysia Cup at the end of 1994, Singapore football was at risk of decline and irrelevance as Malaysia Cup was the main competition that Singapore contested in on an annual basis. However, efforts from the local football community, government and players proved invaluable to the continuation of Singapore football in the infant stages of the new league as could be seen from the articles published by local football magazines like GOAL! and SAMBA SOCCER and newspapers of The Straits Times and The New Paper. Bachelor of Arts in History 2019-04-01T07:29:18Z 2019-04-01T07:29:18Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76643 en Nanyang Technological University 65 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Culture
Tsang, Yuk Tim
Samba soccer : fan culture and national mythology
title Samba soccer : fan culture and national mythology
title_full Samba soccer : fan culture and national mythology
title_fullStr Samba soccer : fan culture and national mythology
title_full_unstemmed Samba soccer : fan culture and national mythology
title_short Samba soccer : fan culture and national mythology
title_sort samba soccer fan culture and national mythology
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Culture
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76643
work_keys_str_mv AT tsangyuktim sambasoccerfancultureandnationalmythology