I did not come here to
praise sport, I came here to question it.
I came here to ask wether Jacques Ellul was correct win his analysis of sport. While fellow Frenchman Camus is endearing in his classic comment about sport and its value in teaching us camaraderie, and fraternity; Ellul is not as positive.
“In every conceivable way sport is an extension of the technical spirit. Its mechanisms reach into the individual's innermost life, working a transformation of his body and its motions as a function of technique and not as a function of some traditional end foreign to technique, as, for example, harmony, joy, or the realization of a spiritual good. In sport, as elsewhere, nothing gratuitous is allowed to exist; everything must be useful and must come up to technical expectations.
Sport carries on
without deviation the mechanical tradition of furnishing relief and
distraction to the worker after he has finished his work proper so
that he is at no time independent of one technique
or another. In sport
the citizen of the technical Society finds the same spirit, criteria,
morality, actions, and objectives--in short, all the technical laws
and customs-which he encounters in office or factory.”
Jacues Ellul The Technological Society (384).
For Ellul, sport is all
about Bread and Circuses. Keep the people fed and entertained and
they will be malleable, content for the nation to deal with. Every
sport is the continued reinforcement of technique for the human body
and mind. It is not an Olympian ideal in the classical Greek
conception but something else.
“For the Greeks, physical exercise was an ethic for developing freely and harmoniously the form and strength of the human body. For the Romans, it was a technique for increasing the legionnaire's efficiency. The Roman
“For the Greeks, physical exercise was an ethic for developing freely and harmoniously the form and strength of the human body. For the Romans, it was a technique for increasing the legionnaire's efficiency. The Roman
conception prevails
today.” Ellul (382-383).
Are You Saying Sport Is
Bad?
You may want to say that
there is a sport that is closer to a harmoniously and freely
developed form. And that may be possible. But even a champion darts
player has developed their body to the rigour of international darts.
Even a suburban park
cricketer like myself has a gym routine that is based on the physical
resilience that I require to play the game. I have to get into the
gym otherwise I will not have the strength to keep up playing to the
level I want to play. Again, efficiency.
What Is Traditional And
Not Technique?
One could say dance is one
of those traditional forms that has little of nothing to do with
technique. Which is plausible, if the people dancing have little
connection to the forms and techniques that we are born into. This
from of traditional dance is one that is established and dedicated to
the telling of a cultures stories to foster and maintain the identity
of a distinct group of people.
While these traditional
dances may have methods and movements they are not focused on the
pursuit of higher, better, faster. I am not sure there was an
indigenous Baryshnikov though they obviously had and still have
those who shine. This is not the same as the lessons and instruction
learned by Baryshnikov.
So when you want to watch
something that is not technique, or not as much technique. A practice
that is very much human and not indoctrinated with the influences of
technique, perhaps NITV can help? Perhaps the whirling Dervish is
better, or the Gregorian Chant? Maybe listening to traditional music
forms. A documentary on the evolution of Hip-hop or Jazz could. But
even these have been turned or will be turned and made to fit into
our society, into a technique.
How Does This Relate To
Sport Other Than Denigrating It?
In the AFL and in Cricket
there have issues to do with the game and its structure. The
relevancy of Test Cricket and its recent minimised versions, the
constant improving conditions for batting. Then there is the fast
track development of cricketers as a talented elite. All this in the
face of players like Hussey, Rogers, and Voges who were in their late
twenties when they began their successful careers. Maybe like Matt
Wade there is something to do with experience and not just fostering
talent?
In the AFL the battle is
set against coaching tactics that have brought scoring down to levels
not seen sine the 1930's. The recent rule changes are there to
penalise the coaches but that did not halt them for long. Techniques
have been developed and will still be developed. The game changes and
always will, it has yet to be fully formed. Unlike American Football
we have only recently tried to make it uniformly rigid.
These are all techniques.
All of them no different to military, political, scientific,
financial or corporate techniques. They begin in their way as an open
pre-structure that is not fully formed. As people engage and play
creatively the rules slowly form and coalesce. Tactics develop from
this creativity and eventually into a rigid concrete form. Though not
all techniques develop at the same pace.
Despite all of this, each
technique is going through these development phases arriving at a
solid form. Until a revolution comes to begin the process anew. It
occurred with One Day Cricket and Twenty over cricket. It happened in
AFL with Pagan's Paddock, with the Flood, with zone defence.
Something new will develop. That is the gift of technique. We are
just waiting for another idea.
However, this leaves us in
the position of passively waiting for that new development. Once
again we are restricted within the mechanised form of relief and
distraction. I apologise to say that I do not know how to exit this
cycle. Because like you, I was brought up in it and know nothing
else.
Phillip Hall is
currently writing an essay about hope and technology for The
University of Divinity. Jacques Ellul's book The Technological
Society is core to this essay. Techniques are central to our lives
and sport is merely one of them. How we live with technique? Now that
is the challenge.
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