Missive #69 – Los Hooligans

Missive #69 - Los Hooligans
Missive #69 - back
sent from: The High Street, Esher, Surrey. Destination: Los Angeles, California, USA
The postcard reads:

Finished Bill Buford’s book ‘Among The Thugs’ for the second time. It leaves you shaken and disturbed. He talks specifically about the violence found in football supporters in the mid-80s – the famous English “hooligans”, and the thrill and exhilaration found in a crowd – a violent crowd – that seems to be in our basest nature. His insights could be written about the rioting crowds who looted and burned this past August.
Here’s one extract: “.. a bloated code of maleness, an exaggerated, embarrassing patriotism, a violent nationalism, an array of bankrupt antisocial habits. This bored, empty, decadent generation consists of nothing more than what it appears to be. It is a lad culture without mystery, so deadened that it uses violence to wake itself up. It pricks itself so that it has feeling, burns its flesh so that it has smell.

Bill Buford’s book is a must-read for anyone interested in journalism, reporting, football, crowd behaviour, mob violence, and an honest and searing look at the violence that exists in all of our hearts, men in particular. 
My father, who grew up in Franco’s Spain, has always shied away from a crowd, any crowd. As children and even adults he would forbid us from attending concerts, and discourage us from becoming sports fans, I think less about any objection he had to the thing itself, and more because in the presence of a crowd there was a chance our sense of self would be lost and we might participate in actions that we wouldn’t have otherwise. When I’m asked to join any kind of organised group, club, church, mass movement, I tend to be a little cautious, sorry, I say, I’m not a joiner.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *