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ABSTRACT:
Discusses evidence which suggests that soccer hooliganism is a product of specific cultural conditions. Attempts to conceptualize the ways in which these conditions generate a violent or aggressive masculine style and establishes the qualities of professional soccer that have given it a lasting hold on the imaginations of sections of the working class. A tentative explanation of soccer crowd behavior is offered, relating long term changes in disorderliness to specific changes in the class structure and in the social composition of soccer crowds.
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