Part introspective soul searching, part cultural analysis, Tribal tackles the controversies plaguing college athletics, tracing the dubious historical underpinnings of Americans' most popular sport, offering a visceral and often funny analysis of its tribal thrills and deep contradictions.
Florida State's football team is always in the headlines, producing Heisman Trophy candidates, winning championships, and, at the same time, dealing with federal investigations into corruption and rape. Same as many big time collegiate sports programs. Seems no matter how the team transgresses off the field, if they excel on the field, everyone forgives them. Writer, professor and conflicted Seminole Diane Roberts looks at the problems plaguing her campus in Tallahassee, examining them within the context of college football itself and its significance in American life, and explores how the game shapes our culture.
Why can't an intelligent, cultivated woman quit the violent, glorious, corrupt world of college football?
- Cultural Analysis: Explore the deep, often disturbing, connections between the game, fundamentalist Christianity, and American militarism.
- Sports Journalism: Join a writer, professor, and conflicted Seminole fan as she navigates the moral maze of being an academic who loves a brutal, beautiful game.
- Football in the South: Go inside the scandals and championship seasons at Florida State University, a program that serves as a perfect microcosm for the sport's modern troubles.
- Social Commentary: Unpack the tribal passions that make college football a powerful, unifying, and divisive force in American life.
About the Author :
Diane Roberts is a contributor to NPR, the Guardian, and the Oxford American, among many other publications. She is the author of three books, and her work has been anthologized in Best American Essays and Best American Food Writing. She holds a PhD from Oxford University and teaches literature and creative writing at Florida State University in Tallahassee.
Review :
"A gifted writer, [Roberts] is rightly outraged by the sport and her school's links with some of the uglier aspects of American life, but she truly adores the 'Noles. Most readers will share her ambivalence while thoroughly enjoying her take on a troubled sport." - Booklist (starred review)
"...a penetrating examination of how and why football has infiltrated our system of higher education..." - Salon
"People who have decided to read one book having to do with college football should choose Tribal. Roberts presents the attractions of the game as well as the recognition that college football as practiced at Florida State and places like it is indefensible-part 'beloved tradition, ' part 'corporate enterprise." - Boston Globe
"[Tribal] affords an explanation of one of the most profound puzzles of today's college-sports scene: why the NCAA colossus has not only secured the American psyche in a stranglehold but continues to tighten its grip." - BookForum
"Those experiences were no doubt the germ of Tribal which exudes Roberts' satirical Southern sensibility and way of wrapping hard truths in a droll, frequently bawdy and baroque kind of humor that can combine TMZ tabloid shock and Faulknerian literary awe in the same paragraph." - Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"Diane Roberts is a wonder. She's a surpassingly insightful writer and is as funny as a stand-up comic. Her book Tribal, on college football and far more, is a sui generis masterpiece." - Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain
"Tribal is a lover's quarrel with college football so raucous, so entertainingly appalled, and so wise that it goes down as easily as a shot of bourbon from a smuggled flask on a Saturday afternoon in the fall." - Will Blythe, New York Times bestselling author of To Hate Like This is to Be Happy Forever
"In Diane Roberts's deft hands, football is never just a game-it's a mirror of American attitudes toward gender, class, and especially race. Roberts is a brilliant cultural critic and a dream of a writer, and Tribal is not only timely-it's necessary reading." - Gilbert King, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Devil in the Grove
"Diane Roberts is irresistible, the Molly Ivins of Florida, and Tribal is essential to understanding the dynamics of American culture. Tribal isn't just a good book, it's a great one-and hilarious to boot." - Bob Shacochis, National Book Award-winning author of Easy in the Islands