This article investigates the rationale leading growing numbers of West African males to pursue a career
in professional football, by taking the particular case of male youth in Accra and exploring how and why
they are drawn into the football industry. Football is used as a lens to extend contemporary geographical
debates over the agency, resourcefulness and entrepreneurialism of young people residing in the Global
South. The transition from junior to senior secondary school is found to be a pivotal moment within many
of the biographical accounts collected in Accra. I use theorisations of youth in sub-Saharan Africa to conceptualise
this moment as a vital conjuncture, and shed light on how a career in football is now seen as a
way to circumvent an education system considered to lead to unemployment, or unacceptable employment.
Significantly, against a backdrop of neoliberal reform and an absence of state welfare, the perception
that a career in professional football offers a means to create an income and be self-sufficient is very
appealing. But it also offers more than that. It provides a means to demonstrate one’s masculinity, specifically,
displays of wealth through conspicuous consumption, behaviour that young Ghanaians refer
to as living the X-Way. It is argued that for male Ghanaian youth, the professional football player who
is able to draw upon his latent sporting bodily capital and live the X-Way embodies resourcefulness.
He is his own enterprise, a Foucauldian ‘entrepreneur of self’.
Funding
This research was funded by the Economic and Social Research
Council.
History
School
Social Sciences
Department
Geography and Environment
Published in
GEOFORUM
Volume
47
Pages
84 - 92 (9)
Citation
ESSON, J., 2013. A body and a dream at a vital conjuncture: Ghanaian youth, uncertainty and the allure of football. Geoforum, 47, pp. 84 - 92.
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported (CC BY 3.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Publication date
2013
Notes
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Elsevier under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/