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The Global Game

The goalie as tragic, existential figure — a cliché. Literature from Nabokov to Camus, from Handke to Evelyn Waugh teaches us instead that keepers are seekers, constantly making choices, committing to gambles, wrestling with demons and conflicts, “polyvalent figures” who stand in liminal space, “at the threshold between two realities, goal or no goal, desolation or new life.” Like Dante’s journey from hell to paradise, the goalie stands apart but strives to transcend that isolation — to her teammates, her culture, even the divine. (John Turnbull/The Global Game)

(Image: Alan Knight, Portsmouth goalkeeper, depicted in graffiti at Fratton Park. Image credit: Ben Sutherland/Flickr through a Creative Commons license.)

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Risking One’s Life to Get Spurs’ News

Emad Nimah spent seven years in an Iranian prison during the Iran-Iraq war — bad enough, but then he couldn’t get any news about Spurs, which was true torture. One day, a packet of salt was brought to him with a tiny radio, with which he listened to BBC news bulletins and “felt, at least momentarily, as if I was part of the civilised world. But it would be 19 more years before he could watch a game… (The Global Game)

Read of the Day: Why Are Americans So Mean?

The new film Pelada — Portuguese for kickabouts as well as “naked” — follows two Americans who take a soccer ball around the world and shoot the games they get into…in a Bolivian prison, with Shanghai freestylers, on a rooftop with Japanese salarymen. A deliberate rebuke to the racist documentary Endless Summer, Pelada is a positive act of un-Americanism — asking, among other things, “Why are Americans so mean?” (John Turnbull/The Global Game)