Kicking
Former professional soccer player Jules Boykoff draws on his lifetime of athletic experience to reflect on the practice of kicking. With short vignettes blending the personal, reflective, historical, and analytical, Kicking is uniquely positioned to reflect on the beautiful game and its politics.
As a poet, public-facing scholar of sports politics, and former professional soccer player, having represented the United States on the menâs U23 national soccer team, Jules Boykoff draws on his lifetime of athletic experience to reflect on the practice of kicking. With short vignettes blending the personal, the reflective, the historical, and the analytical, Kicking is uniquely positioned to reflect on the most popular sport in the world. From the act of kicking a soccer ball, Boykoff looks outward to his own family history, including his motherâs struggle with polio, which fed her insistence on his athleticism; to broader trends like greenwashing and sportwashing; and to reflections on sportâs toxic masculinity, the poetics of on-field revenge, and the power-politics of both the menâs and womenâs World Cups. Kicking is a must-read for all those who love the beautiful game.
Original: $27.22
-65%$27.22
$9.53Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Former professional soccer player Jules Boykoff draws on his lifetime of athletic experience to reflect on the practice of kicking. With short vignettes blending the personal, reflective, historical, and analytical, Kicking is uniquely positioned to reflect on the beautiful game and its politics.
As a poet, public-facing scholar of sports politics, and former professional soccer player, having represented the United States on the menâs U23 national soccer team, Jules Boykoff draws on his lifetime of athletic experience to reflect on the practice of kicking. With short vignettes blending the personal, the reflective, the historical, and the analytical, Kicking is uniquely positioned to reflect on the most popular sport in the world. From the act of kicking a soccer ball, Boykoff looks outward to his own family history, including his motherâs struggle with polio, which fed her insistence on his athleticism; to broader trends like greenwashing and sportwashing; and to reflections on sportâs toxic masculinity, the poetics of on-field revenge, and the power-politics of both the menâs and womenâs World Cups. Kicking is a must-read for all those who love the beautiful game.











