CLCWeb: Comparative
Literature and Culture: A WWWeb Journal ISSN
1481-4374
CLCWeb Library of Research and Information ...
CLCWeb Contents 3.1 (March 2001)
<http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu/clcweb01-1/axelrod01.html> © Purdue
University Press
Mark AXELROD
Author's Profile: Mark Axelrod <http://www.chapman.edu/comm/english/faculty/axelrod/> teaches English and comparative literature at Chapman University, Orange, California.
Director of the John Fowles Center for Creative Writing, he is a two-time recipient
of the United Kingdom Leverhulme Fellowship for Creative Writing. An author
of four novels to date -- Capital Castles (Pacific Writers Press, 2000),
Cloud Castles (Pacific Writers Press, 1998), Cardboard Castles
(Pacific Writers Press, 1996), and Bombay California (Pacific Writers
Press, 1994) -- Axelrod is working on a new novel entitled, The Posthumous
Memoirs of Blase Kubash, a story based on a text by Machado de Assis. Awards
he has won for his fiction include the Tim McGinnis Award, the Camargo Foundation
Fellowship in Fiction Writing (twice), the Maxwell Perkins Award for Fiction
Writing, the Bush Foundation Fellowship for Fiction Writing, and the Indiana
University Award for Experimental Writing. His numerous publications in scholarship
include The Politics of Style in the Fiction of Balzac, Beckett and Cortázar
(St. Martin's Press, 1992), The Poetics of Novels (Macmillan, 1999),
and Aspects of the Screenplay (Heinemann, 2001), and he is working on
a new book entitled Mismatch Dissolve: The Adaptation of Postmodern Fiction
to Film. He is a practicing screenwriter and has been awarded for his work
by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the Writers Guild of America,
East, the Screenwriters Forum (University of Wisconsin), and the Sundance Institute.
E-mail: <axelrod@chapman.edu>.
Popular Culture and the Rituals of American Football
1. As I write this, once again it's autumn. It’s a crisp fall
day. About fifty degrees, the October sky is cloudless; the autumn colors are
at their peak. The fans stand in line to buy or sell or scalp tickets. Outside
the stadium entrance, the fans hear the humming resonance of the crowd and the
brassy sounds of marching music. The tickets are handed to a sullen gatekeeper,
who rips them in half and directs the natives towards a crowded bowl inside.
Female cheerleaders, clad in cramped-fitting outfits, prance along the sidelines. Animal mascots parade in the end zone. Soon, the captains of the two teams meet
the referees at midfield. One referee makes the introductions, and then tosses
the coin in the air. The toss is called and a collective cheer races throughout
the stadium. The captains make the decisions, choose their goals, shake hands,
and then jog off the field for last minute instructions from the head coach.
Fans stand for the National Anthem, cheering at its conclusion, then remain
standing for the opening kickoff. The teams rush onto the field, smack, slap,
and head butt each other, energized by the screams of their fans and the currents
of adrenaline. Then the kickoff. And after four quarters packed with passes,
tackles, sacks, and scores of all numbers, a team has either won or lost and
the natives make their way out of the bowl, down the ramp, and homeward.
2. That would appear to be a capsulized version of the beginning,
middle, and end of what has become America's "great American pastime": Football;
however, that stops short of what the game truly is. What has really been seen
is not merely a football game, but an exercise in ritual, which, though uniformly
different in structure, is not much different in content from rituals practiced
by more "barbaric" ancestors. The American ritual is a composition of rites
that not only fulfills that notion of what is considered "sport," but that which
is considered both sacred and mysterious in the sense that the football ritual
celebrates the harvest and the fruits of vegetation, emphasizes the struggle
between the forces of life and death, and re-enacts the creation of the universe.
End of the millennium American technology has led humankind to the point that
it believes itself to be significantly more advanced than its primitive ancestors;
however true that may be in a relative sense, one thing has not substantially
changed: The rituals and the myths that we either consciously or unconsciously
re-enact or believe in and how that plays a part in popular culture. The difference
between the primitives' rituals and our own is that we have hidden the true
meanings of our rituals beneath guises that, at first appearance, seem too far
detached from our notion of what constitutes a ritual to be ritualistic. Like
primitive man, we are generally not aware that much of what we do in the course
of daily life may actually be considered ritualistic. Post-modern humankind
would like to think of itself as completely existential, that is, as maker and
mover of all things both terrestrial and cosmic and, therefore, without a need
for a belief in a "higher order." Because of that self-adulation, we post-modernists
have little, ostensibly, of what our archaic descendants had in abundance: Symbols,
myths, and rituals, that pay homage to the creation. With the advancement in
technology and the decreased interest in organized religion, post-modernists
have lost touch with our primitive intuition and, consequently, have apparently
lost our need for those symbols and rituals that reflect those intuitive feelings
about nature, life, and the cosmos; however, the sacredness that wo/man seems
to have lost in a strictly religious sense, has successfully manifested itself
in another less obvious but equally sacred way ... sport; and for the purposes
of this approach, American football.
3. Many people, aficionadoes of the sport as well as its antagonists,
have attempted to draw parallels between football and the "game of war" under
the assumption that football is like war. True enough, the game is abundant
with allusions to war, dictated by the terminology of the game (e.g., the bomb,
the blitz, the platoon system, the flanks, etc.). Likewise, the defensive units
of many teams, especially the professional ones, used to be given colorful pseudonyms,
which, if not connoting war, connoted violence (e.g., the venerable Dallas Cowboys'
Doomsday Defense or the Denver Broncos' Orange Crush or the Minnesota Vikings'
Purple People Eaters or the Los Angeles Rams' Fearsome Foursome or the Pittsburgh
Steelers' Steel Curtain). The game actually begins with a "draw of first blood,"
often ends in "sudden death," and has been replete with "headhunters," "red
dogs," "sacks," "wedges," "spears," "crack back blocks," and "coffin corners";
however, those parallels with violence and war are only a portion of the entire
ritual, only rites within the ritual that are actually concerned with much more
sacred phenomena. Humankind has not, does not, nor will not live in a vacuum
detached
from historical events, archetypes, and cosmic religious values. Being a part
of the universe, not separate from it, individuals exist in accordance with
its laws, whether they accepts them or not; whether they feel his technology
and/or intellect raises him above them or not; or whether s/he feels ritual,
myth, and religion are or are not part of her everyday experience. In other
words, post-modern humans are not outside the pale of socio-cultural history
and its myths and rituals. In relation to our manner of being, in our conscious
or unconscious ritual enactments, which, though seemingly non-existent, are "eventually" present, we are equal to our ancestors.
4. Mircea Eliade has written in his book The Myth of the
Eternal Return that "if one goes to the trouble of penetrating the authentic
meaning of an archaic myth or symbol, one cannot but observe that this meaning
shows a recognition of a certain situation in the universe and that, consequently,
it implies a metaphysical or transcendental position" (3). In its own way, football
recapitulates that transcendental position.
The Ticket as a Rite of Participation
5. Purchasing one's ticket is a rite of participation that
allows the buyer/fan/devotee, through the mediation of the ticket, to experience
the ritual that follows. As any non-ticket holder knows, one cannot experience
the game without one. That is, one cannot participate in the ritual unless one
has an object of admittance. True enough, one can watch a game on television,
catch glimpses through a fence or beneath a railing, or see it on a replay,
but to actually experience the immediacy of the game without being interrupted
by commercials is impossible. The ticket, then, allows the buyer to fully experience
the ritualistic re-enactment of the creation myth in, what we will see is, a
sacred place and during a mythic time. It is a rite of passage in the sense
that it allows one to experience an event of transcendental order that leads
one to....
The Stadium as a Sacred Place in Mythic Time
6. Once the ticket has been purchased it is handed to the
gatekeeper who, rather unceremoniously, allows one to enter. The gatekeepers
are the transitional point between profane and sacred space, between time and
timelessness. For the stadium is, in fact, representative of a sacred
place, and what takes place within it is timeless. In an earlier era the concept
of a sacred place involved the idea of repeating the mystery of creation that
consecrated the place by separating it from the profane space around it. An
ordinary place became a sacred one because of the eternal quality of the mystery
that first consecrated it. The mystery did not replace a given area of profane
space thus making it sacred; it ensured that sacredness would continue there
forever. In such a way, the place became an unending source of holiness that
enabled man, by experiencing the ritual within it, to become one with what was
sacred. This simple idea of the place's becoming, by means of a mystery, an
eternal center of the sacred, accounts for a variety of apparently diverse systems
including football; but, however diverse these holy areas may be, they all share
a common item: There is always a clearly-defined boundary within which man communicates
with what is sacred. The ultimate example of this is the Super Bowl, about which
more will be said later; however, every football stadium or arena shares that
same religious quality of being a sacred place. In addition, there is also the
remarkable relationship between the actual shape of the stadium, its internal
structure, and certain religious symbols that connote the creation of the universe.
A number of medieval cities, not to mention post-modern ones, had their foundations
patterned after the Mandala, the Buddhist or Hindu graphic symbol that represents
the Universe. Mandala is a Sanskrit word that means "circle"; however, in the
area of religious practices and psychological studies it denotes circular images.
Often these graphics contain a quaternity, or a multiple of four, in the form
of, among other things, a cross, a star, or a square. The prototype of this
medieval city was, of course, the Heavenly Jerusalem, that had a square ground
plan within and surrounding walls with twelve gates that separated it from the
profane space outside. This "squaring of the circle" is what Jung has called
the "archetype of wholeness." Because of that significance, the "quaternity
of One" has been the schema for all the images of God, as depicted in the visions
of Ezekiel, Daniel, and Enoch. The Mandalian plan was a transformation of the
city into an orderly Universe, a sacred place bounded by its sacred center to
the outer world.
7. It can be seen that every football bowl or stadium is essentially
in structure, but, by connecting the points of oppositional and diagonal entrances,
one not only sees a collection of inter-connecting triangles, called Yantras
(that are the union of opposites), but also a collection of diagonal lines that,
not so coincidentally, intersect at midfield, which is the original point for
the creation ritual itself. Eliade has written in The Sacred and the Profane
that the creation of
the world is the example for all other constructions. Every town, dwelling,
building (or in our case stadium) stands at the Center of the
World so that its construction is only possible by means of not only abolishing
profane space and time, but establishing sacred space and
time. By its very nature, sacred time is reversible in the sense that it is
actually a primordial mythical time that is made present. Every
sacred event, then, represents the reaffirmation of a sacred event that took
place in a mythical past, that is.... In The Beginning. In such a
way, sacred time is infinitely recoverable and repeatable. It neither changes
nor is exhausted. With every football game that is played, the participants
rediscover that same sacred time. It is the time that was created and sanctified
by the gods at the period of their birth, of which the game is precisely the
reaffirmation. This is seen game and game again, season in season out. The stadium
lives for the team and the team is immortal. Although the players graduate,
get injured, quit, retire, or are fired, the team lives on. In other words,
the city in which the team resides is irrelevant. Whether the Rams move from
Cleveland to Los Angeles to St. Louis or the Cardinals move from Chicago to
St. Louis to Phoenix does, in no way, reduce the fact that the team is still
the "Rams" or the "Cardinals" and as such the ritual is constantly repeated
ad infinitum. The "Oilers" still exist, but are now the "Titans" in Tennessee
since one was hard-pressed to say there’s much oil there and the "Raiders" still
exist even though they’re not sure in what city they belong. And probably the
most ludicrous move envisioned is that of the Vikings moving from Minnesota
to San Antonio. San Antonio Vikings? There is nothing on the uniform that would
indicate a change of venue; to the contrary the significant totems, colors,
etc. all tend to remain the same. All things, then, are interrelational: The
stadium, the fans, the players, the coaches, even the game itself, live for
one thing only: The ritual. And the ritual exists solely in order to sanctify
the creation of the universe that would lead us to.
Cheerleaders, Mascots, and the Tossing of the Coin:
Fertility, Animal Worship, the Sacred Center, and Sacred Land
8. Once one has purchased an object of participation and has
entered a sacred place that will be the stage for a timeless ritual that will
eventually celebrate the creation of the universe, we can see how the other
rites fit into the overall organization of the ritual. As for the
female cheerleaders (who have historically been the focus of the rite long before
laws dealing with sexual discrimination allowed men into the "mystical fraternity
of cheerleading" and who are still the pervasive sexual object in professional
football), they can best be explained in light of fertility. Woman has been
mystically held to be one with the earth, and the concept of Earth-Mother as
the inexhaustible source of fecundity is probably as ancient as myth itself.
The inter-relationship among woman, the soil, and fertility and their association
with the entire creative structure of the game seems apparent. Their presence
is, in one sense, representative of the entire creative act that is being carried
out, while in another sense, they are motivators of the creative act. In some
early Greek cults, the fertility of woman was seen as a profoundly mysterious
inner process withheld from man. By elevating the warlike, death-dealing male
to the consciousness of the creation of life, woman opened a path to the metaphysical
roots of man's being. By ideal extension, female cheerleaders do the same thing:
They ostensibly encourage, motivate, and support the men to continue the creative
act (no matter how often they are ignored) while at the same time representing
it.
9. Likewise, animal and vegetable symbols act in much the
same manner. Although there are some exceptions, the most predominant team totems
are of animals, vegetation, or alternative aspects of nature. For example,
nine of the Pac-Ten teams have either animals or other natural aspects as their
totem; as are nine of the Big Ten (that is actually the Big Eleven in search
of Twelve to make a dozen ten). Animal symbols show how vital it is for man
to integrate into his life the symbol's psychic content, namely, instinct. Animals
are neither good nor evil, they are a selection of nature and cannot desire
anything not a part of it, and therefore they obey their instincts. The parallel
in human life is simple: The foundation of human nature is instinct and animal
mascots fulfill that need. The use of Indian totems as in Chief Illiniwek at
Illinois or Seminoles at Florida State are, presumably, meant to be "homages"
to Indian culture; however, since the use of Indian mascots in no way is a genuine
representation of Indian culture nor can it be construed in any way as an homage
to the same, the misuse of Indians only tends to undermine the symbol
and modifies the mascot into a kind of commodity with a certain amount of use-value
for a consumer. Vegetation too is symbolic of fertility and rebirth, and would,
obviously, be the stage upon which the ritual would be carried out. For it too
is symbolic of creation. The immediate question arises: "But what about artificial
turf?" Ironically, even in its attempt to alter the natural aspect of the ritual,
technology has only emphasized the symbol of the field as a place of perpetual
rebirth since it always remains green in spite of seasonal variation and cosmic
as the term "astro" would imply. But clearly the most important rite is the
meeting of the teams at midfield since it is crucial to the entire ritual because
the teams could actually meet anywhere: The sidelines, the end zone, the locker
room. Actually, the entire rite could be obviated over the phone, through e-mail,
a fax. But it isn’t. They meet at the fifty yard-line, and in the middle
of the field. The significance of meeting there may seem obvious at first, but
its relevance in relation to sacred ritual bears attention since the question
begs itself: Why the fifty? The symbolism of the center has been, from archaic
societies onward, representative of a sacred place. As Eliade writes, "From
all that has been said, it follows that the true world is always in the middle,
at the Center, for it is here that there is a break in plane and hence communication
among the three cosmic zones. Whatever the extent of the territory involved,
the cosmos that it represents is always perfect" (Sacred 42). In accordance
with the creation of the universe, the center has been called the "zone of absolute
reality." Not only were the "Tree of Life" and the "Fountain of Youth" both
situated at a center, but the universe itself was considered to have begun at
a center; therefore, the significance of meeting and tossing the coin at midfield,
especially in light of the Mandalian organization of the stadium, becomes apparent:
is a sacred rite that consecrates the ground and divides the sacred territories
upon which the ritual will be played. Through the coin toss
itself, the life forces (home team) and the death forces (visiting team) --
depending on whom one "roots" for, a rhizome of cosmic proportions -- are situated
and the ground become consecrated through its transformation into a center.
Just as the time of any ritual coincides with the mythical time of the "beginning," every consecrated space coincides with the Center of the World.
10. Using a coin rather than a cap or a button is obvious:
Coin is the means by which capitalized cultures exist, it is that which maintains
subsistence. In American culture one could hardly exist without utilizing this
device that we pass for our food, our gas, and even for
the object of participation. Since every creation repeats, in its own way the
creation of the universe and the world, and since whatever is
founded has its foundation at the Center of the World, it is only natural that
this rite be enacted, with a symbol of subsistence and
exchange, and at midfield. The designation of the goals is simply the designation
of the territories each team will defend. In certain semi-civilized tribes,
territory was defined by natural landmarks: A rock ring, whose presence at that
spot had been sanctified by rites of consecration. When boundaries were placed,
the group took possession of it in such a religious way that a stranger who
set foot on it committed a sacrilege analogous to a profane person's entrance
into any other sacred area. The comparisons here seem apparent, as any fan,
coach, or defensive safety knows when the opposing team crosses the fifty-yard
line: "They're on my land." In addition to the sacred areas there were, what
anthropologist Arnold van Gennep has called, "neutral zones": "Because of the
pivoting of sacredness the territories on either side of the neutral zone were
sacred in relation to whomever was in the zone, but the zone, in turn, was sacred
for the inhabitants of the adjoining territories. The transition, then, from
one zone to another was movement between two sacred worlds." The parallel
with football is apparent. Each territory on either side of the "mystical fifty"
is sacred. Granted, the defense is supposed to defend one-hundred yards if it
has to, but as teams often find out, the hardest yard to take is often the one
at the goal line. One need only ask someone like John Randle or Bruce
Smith or Kevin Greene about that. In football, the neutral zone is the fifty
yard-line since it is the only yard marker that belongs to neither team, but
to both; and any victory over the intruder is a victory over "chaos" and a triumph
for "harmony" that leads one to.
The Game as Life versus Death, Harmony over Chaos and Creation
11. Once the pre-game rites have been concluded, the territories
have been established, the ground is consecrated twice: Once by the coin toss
and again by the playing of the National Anthem that, being a political instrument,
would have no apparent reason for being played except in relation to the inferences
one can draw from the rites within the ritual itself (i.e., war, patriotism,
victory). It is only after all the pre-game rites are concluded that the participants
are prepared for the game. The players (warriors) huddle with the coach (chief)
for last minute suggestions on how to defeat the other team (death). Then the
ritual begins in earnest. It has been suggested (and has obviously been taken
seriously since many "chiefs" have been dethroned) that the object of the game
is winning. That's partially true; however, the real object of the game is to
create a score. Winning is another part of the ritual. Obviously scores don't
come about in illo tempore. What one sees on the field is the execution
of a quantity of plays all designed to create a score. It looks as if they plays
are chaotic, and that is one of the marvelous paradoxes of the game; for the
plays, though appearing chaotic, are not, and, executed in the proper way, should
produce harmony.
12. The idea of creating harmony out of chaos is not only
one of the principle theories behind the physical creation of the universe,
is also a main theory behind certain religious conceptions of the creation of
the universe as well. This is a simple yet profound idea:
Nothing that has existed, exists, or will exist on this or any other planet
could be different from that which has existed, exists, or will
exist in the universe. Being part of and separate from the universe should make
that readily apparent. The religious axiom (as symbolized
in Solomon’s Seal) that "as above, so below" stands beyond scrutiny, whether
it be astrophysics or football. The main concept behind
football is to create a play that, upon proper execution of the apparently chaotic
parts, will create harmony. In other words, points. As any student of the game
knows, points are not given for scoring, but for execution, for creating situations
that will lead to a touchdown, a
field goal, or a safety. Fumbles, interceptions, blocked punts, et cetera are
no different since they contribute to the offensive harmony
of the game. The defense plans on keeping the score away from their zone. They
are fighting against death: A score is life for one team,
and death for the other. If the defense "rises to the occasion" or "plays to
its potential," it robs death of a victory and gives "life to
the offense." These football clichés as well as others like "new life,"
"second life," "aren't dead yet," and "sudden death," are significant
phrases in light of the ritualistic creative aspect of the game; for every idea
of renewal, of restoring what once was, at whatever level of
the game or ritual, can be traced back to the notion of birth and that to the
notion of the creation of the universe. Without getting into the symbolism of
the numbers used in the game (though it hardly seems coincidental that the players
who are generally in control of the ball [life] all have numbers that reach
or approach the Number One) it should be apparent by now that football is a
creation ritual like other sports, abundant in births and deaths. Each kickoff
is a birth, each punt a death. Each touchdown, field goal, or safety is both
a birth for one team and a death for the other, and each rebirth gives a team
the potential to create points. Each game is a game of life and death and each
component of the game is likewise. Each game offers the opportunity for rebirth
as does each season. One dies to one mode of being in order to attain another.
Death constitutes an abrupt change of being and at the same time is a rite of
passage or initiation. But what is that rite of passage in football? One might
say, winning. But what is actually won? The game, of course, but that is not
what is genuinely important. What is of ultimate importance is being #1. The
connotation of being #l seems simple, but based on ritual, rather than on an
arbitrary selection by wire service reporters or "chiefs," it becomes much more
significant since being #l is equal to attaining Godhood.
The Bowls and the Ritual of Spring / The New Year and Attainment
of Godhood
13. In the days before the bowls became over-valued, commodified
relationship to football and by television stations to charge out-of-the-world
advertising rates, before the bowls became so diffuse that the talent level
became almost insignificant, before winning a minimum of six games meant an
invitation to one of these meaningless events, finishing #l in a division or
league was an honor that qualified a team to participate in a major Bowl Game.
The four oldest and most venerable bowl games (though currently not necessarily
the most hyped) Rose, Orange, Sugar, and Cotton, all had two things in common:
They have as their titles, objects of vegetation and they all occur on or about
New Year's Day (the commercialization of these bowls doesn’t take away from
the ritual only mitigates their sanctity). One could say that those occurrences
are merely coincidental, though if they are, they are remarkably so. Football
season begins at or about the harvest and, for all significant purposes, ends,
except for the Super Bowl, on New Year's Day. The combination of eight of the
best teams in the country, playing in four "vegetative" bowl games, on the day
that celebrates the New Year, and in warm climates (which itself implies the
return of Spring and rebirth) is more than coincidental. It is a direct imitation
of the archaic rituals that not only acknowledged the New Year as the harbinger
of Spring, but also validated the culmination of an association with the godhead.
New Year is a reactualization of the creation of the universe. It implies starting
time over again, at the beginning; that is, it restores the original pristine
time that existed at the outset of the creation. By celebrating the periodic
regeneration of time through the New Year, it presupposes a new creation, a
reproduction of the creative act. In primitive New Year rites several items
were usually prevalent: A goddess, vegetation, totems, animals, and priests.
The presence of a goddess (e.g., a Rose Bowl Queen) beside a plant symbol (e.g.,
a rose) confirmed one meaning in archaic myth: That of being an inexhaustible
source of fecundity. That floral motifs are harmonized with other plant and
feminine motifs is due to the central idea of an inexhaustible creation and
that they play such a major portion in the bowls (i.e., parades) only reinforces
that notion.
14. All associations in myth are not the result of chance,
or without a certain metaphysical significance. As Eliade has written, they
mean
that here is the "center of the world, here is the source of life, youth, and
immortality" (Sacred 43). Trees and plants signify that the Universe
is in constant regeneration and the Queen personifies this limitless source
of Creation as the ultimate basis of all reality. Vegetation is not entirely
symbolic of the rebirth of Spring, but of the revivification of life as well.
Through the symbolism of the animals or mascots, it can be briefly noted that
totems, or team symbols, are everywhere apparent. If not on the field itself,
they can be seen on banners, pennants, hats, sweatshirts and any other paraphernalia.
The presence of the clergy doesn't seem to be as important in these rituals
as in others; however, many of the bowl games do, in fact, have a priest or
rabbi say a blessing prior to the beginning of the game that, in an additional
way, re-sanctifies both the ground and the game (for a third time) and, likewise,
acts as a religious homage to the Creator. With all that in mind, the fact that
the Bowl games should come on or around the New Year is a stroke of archetypal
genius rather than coincidence. On what better day could a team celebrate the
attainment to godhood than on a day that is itself symbolic of the regeneration
of life and of a new creation? They are the penultimate creation rituals being
played on the ultimate creation day. The New Year regenerates what Eliade has
called the "myth of the eternal return," the pattern of repetition of a gesture
projected upon all human and cosmic planes. The cyclical structure of time is
regenerated at each new birth. Everything begins over again at its commencement.
The Bowls (even the "new" #1 Sugar Bowl) tend to harmonize the entire football
ritual: They bring together the creation rites within the game itself, on a
day that represents the rebirth of time and creation, with symbols that reaffirm
that same notion of creation. Everything is interrelated and they all unite
to revivify and verify the creation of the universe. Only one other major game
remains; and it, by nature of its status in the game of football, makes itself
the ultimate expression of the ritual. The fact that the number of Bowls has
increased to the point they are beginning to lose their "mystical majesty" is
due solely to the influx of corporate greed. But even the commodification of
the college Bowl games does little to marginalize the approximate time of the
year in which they Bowls are performed.
15. There is actually little to say about the ritual of the
Super Bowl since it is an extension of all other football rituals. By virtue
of its rank (by definition, "super" meaning over, above) among all the other
Bowls, it has become the ultimate expression of the ritual; but no matter what
its status, the ritual is played exactly the same way and no amount of media
hype can alter that. The difference is, of course, that the winner of that bowl
is truly the #l of all other Number Ones. It has become the ultimate Bowl Game
and as such no name other than Super could possibly be countenanced. The fact
that it has most recently been "allowed" to take place in domed stadia does
not preclude its essentially sacred purpose since to move from warm-climate
outdoor stadia to climate-controlled indoor stadia (e.g., Detroit, Minneapolis,
St. Louis) for the purpose of economic gain has little to do with the order
of the cosmos. And even those moves, regardless of Michigan, Minnesota or Missouri
hospitality, have not been embraced with enduring commercial acceptance.Because
of its ultimate purpose (the "game of games" presumably between the "two best
football teams in the world," although the "worldliness" is merely a hegemonic
device since it’s not seriously played anywhere else outside North America),
the Super Bowl makes any place and any day sacred, as it is the ultimate manifestation
of the creation of the universe; for the victor is truly the one without a second,
except for the one to whom the game is honored and for whom the game is played.
It is not coincidental, then that the gesture for being Number One, also points
heavenward. Because of the fact that no one points downward, the "heavenly"
significance of the gesture should be obvious. Every year, like an eternal return,
we hear the "joke" that changes with the teams, but invariably stays the same
that God plays for the St. Louis Rams or kicks field goals for the Vikings or
used to recruit for Notre Dame or coaches at Michigan; however, in light of
the apparent fact that football is not merely a game, but an homage to both
God and the creation, to the human spirit, the "joke" is that the joke is probably
much closer to the truth of being than most anyone might want to believe.
Works Cited
Eliade, Mircea. The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature
of Religion. Trans. Willard R. Trask. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World,
Eliade, Mircea. Myth of the Eternal Return. Trans. Willard R. Trask.
New York: Pantheon Books, 1971.
Jung, C. Gustav. Mandala Symbolism. Trans. R.F.C. Hull. Princeton: Princeton
UP, 1972.
Van Gennep, Arnold. The Rites of Passage. Trans. Monika B. Vizedom and
Gabrielle L. Caffee. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1960.
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