Migration, Masculinity and the Fugitive State of Mind in the Irish Emigrant Footballer Autobiography: the Case of Paul McGrath
Citation
Free, M.(2010)'Migration, Masculinity and the Fugitive State of Mind in the Irish Emigrant Footballer Autobiography: the Case of Paul McGrath'. Estudios Irlandeses, 5, 45-57.
Free, M.(2010)'Migration, Masculinity and the Fugitive State of Mind in the Irish Emigrant Footballer Autobiography: the Case of Paul McGrath'. Estudios Irlandeses, 5, 45-57.
Abstract
The ‘confessional’ autobiography has become a popular variant of professional football
autobiography in Britain. Co-written ‘autobiographies’ by prominent former emigrant Irish or Irish
descended international footballers have featured prominently in this sub-genre. Their ‘confessions’
of alcoholism, gambling, infidelity, irresponsibility towards partners or dependents, or underlying
ontological insecurity might be seen as an insightful engagement with their lives as male footballers in
Britain. However, focusing on two autobiographies of Paul McGrath, and reading these ‘troubled’
accounts using psychoanalytic perspectives on sport, migration and masculinity, it is argued that they
are contradictory texts which embody a peculiar variation on the emigrant “fugitive state of mind”
(Davar, 1996), both approximating and deferring mature, reflexive engagement with the social and
cultural construction of identity, allowing them to occupy a liminal but discontent imaginary space in
which adolescent masculinity can be indefinitely extended. The homosocial world of men’s
professional football is a key factor in this.
Keywords
MigrationMasculinity
Autobiography
Sport
Psychoanalysis