Description

Book Synopsis

Franz Beckenbauer once observed that, in England, «war correspondents get their say whenever their team plays us.» In Crossing the Line?, Christoph Wagner surveys German football rivalry in the second half of the twentieth century as it was played out on the pitch and in the press. The Second World War undoubtedly cast a long shadow, framing the way in which matches were previewed and reported. The contrasting fortunes of the British and West German economies and British anxieties regarding German unification also impacted on sports coverage.

An intense Anglo-German international football rivalry was forged against this backdrop. Newspaper readers often turn to the back page first and first impressions are important. Press coverage helped to shape what the English thought of the Germans and what they thought of themselves. Crossing the Line? – which includes an important chapter on the German media – focuses largely on the part played by English newspapers in generating a simplistic sporting commentary heavily dependent on stereotypes before it overreached itself in the mid-1990s and the German popular press began to hit back. As English football pundits often remind their viewers: «You can never underestimate the Germans».



Table of Contents

Contents: Post-War: Anglo-German Football in the 1950s – ‘Of course, a little chauvinism was in order’: England and Germany in the 1960s – ‘For the loser now will be later to win …’, 1968–1978 – ‘Let’s Blitz Fritz’: England versus Germany in the 1980s and 1990s – The German Response.

Crossing the Line?: The Press and Anglo-German

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    A Paperback / softback by Richard Holt, Matthew Taylor, Christoph Wagner

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      Publisher: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
      Publication Date: 20/09/2023
      ISBN13: 9781788746557, 978-1788746557
      ISBN10: 1788746554

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Franz Beckenbauer once observed that, in England, «war correspondents get their say whenever their team plays us.» In Crossing the Line?, Christoph Wagner surveys German football rivalry in the second half of the twentieth century as it was played out on the pitch and in the press. The Second World War undoubtedly cast a long shadow, framing the way in which matches were previewed and reported. The contrasting fortunes of the British and West German economies and British anxieties regarding German unification also impacted on sports coverage.

      An intense Anglo-German international football rivalry was forged against this backdrop. Newspaper readers often turn to the back page first and first impressions are important. Press coverage helped to shape what the English thought of the Germans and what they thought of themselves. Crossing the Line? – which includes an important chapter on the German media – focuses largely on the part played by English newspapers in generating a simplistic sporting commentary heavily dependent on stereotypes before it overreached itself in the mid-1990s and the German popular press began to hit back. As English football pundits often remind their viewers: «You can never underestimate the Germans».



      Table of Contents

      Contents: Post-War: Anglo-German Football in the 1950s – ‘Of course, a little chauvinism was in order’: England and Germany in the 1960s – ‘For the loser now will be later to win …’, 1968–1978 – ‘Let’s Blitz Fritz’: England versus Germany in the 1980s and 1990s – The German Response.

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