The Best Derby County Football Chants Ever - the Best DCFC Songs and Chants

The Best Derby County Football Chants Ever - the Best DCFC Songs and Chants

Author: E. Locken

Publisher: Lulu.com

Published: 2009-06-21

Total Pages: 52

ISBN-13: 0557078970

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The best Derby County football chants ever, also the rudest. Don't ever give the opposition fans a break. Includes classic chants, individual players songs, anti-Forest, Leicester and Sheffield United chants. Keywords: Derby County, DCFC, The Rams, Rammie, Derby County Football Club, Pride Park Stadium, Derby County, DCFC, Derby County Football, Pride Park Stadium, The Baseball Ground, Rams, Rammie, Football Derby, DCFC, Derby Songs, Derby Chants, Derby County Chants, Derby County Songs, the Ultras, the rabble, ramblers, popside, Derby Building Society Stand, Toyota West Stand, Cawarden Stand, UK Diggers East Stand, Super Rams


Shall We Sing a Song For You?

Shall We Sing a Song For You?

Author: Alex Shaw

Publisher: Kings Road Publishing

Published: 2011-06-06

Total Pages: 201

ISBN-13: 1843586479

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When it comes to football chants, British fans surely must be top of the league. Throughout the country every weekend, football stadiums ring with the sound of hundred of thousands of supporters singing the praises of their favourite players, rubbishing the opposition, having a go at the ref and waxing lyrical about past legends. Chants can spring from deep-rooted rivalries or simply from the fact that a player has a funny name. Plundering the pop charts for tunes to set their ditties too, fans have come up with hundreds of hilarious, moving, clever and often downright scandalous songs...all brought together here! From close-to-the-knuckle terrace favourites to brilliantly witty off-the-cuff chants and the classics heard in nearly every stadium in the land, Shall We Sing a Song For You? is the perfect collection of the good, the bad and the downright offensive.


English National Identity and Football Fan Culture

English National Identity and Football Fan Culture

Author: Dr Tom Gibbons

Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.

Published: 2014-04-28

Total Pages: 209

ISBN-13: 1472423305

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In recent years, scholars have understood the increasing use of the St George’s Cross by football fans to be evidence of a rise in a specifically ‘English’ identity. This has emerged as part of a wider ‘national’ response to broader political processes such as devolution and European integration which have fragmented identities within the UK. Using the controversial figurational sociological approach advocated by the twentieth-century theorist Norbert Elias, this book challenges such a view, drawing on ethnographic research amongst fans to explore the precise nature of the relationship between contemporary English national identity and football fan culture. Examining football fans’ expressions of Englishness in public houses and online spaces, the author discusses the effects of globalization, European integration and UK devolution on English society, revealing that the use of the St George’s Cross does not signal the emergence of a specifically ‘English’ national consciousness, but in fact masks a more complex, multi-layered process of national identity construction. A detailed and grounded study of identity, nationalism and globalization amongst football fans, English National Identity and Football Fan Culture will appeal to scholars and students of politics, sociology and anthropology with interests in ethnography, the sociology of sport, fan cultures, globalization and contemporary national identities.


When Saturday Comes

When Saturday Comes

Author: When Saturday Comes

Publisher: Penguin UK

Published: 2006-08-03

Total Pages: 638

ISBN-13: 0141927038

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The best chants, the funniest nicknames, the greatest headlines and enough little-known facts to keep the average football supporter entertained - and entertaining - for several seasons. This is the story of the greatest game on earth, from 'abandoned matches' to 'Yeovil Town', via celebrity fans, mascots, punditry and superstitions, written from the fan's point of view and with a separate entry for every club in the English and Scottish leagues. Who cares why, if Torquay United's strikers had been more prolific in the 1950s, England may never have won the World Cup; or where football hooliganism actually began; or who the hell Captain Henry Blythe Thornhill Wakelam is? We do. Because as every true student of the game knows: it's important.


Newcastle United

Newcastle United

Author: Ged Clarke

Publisher: Random House

Published: 2011-11-04

Total Pages: 265

ISBN-13: 1780573049

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When Newcastle United crashed out of the FA Cup in Cardiff in April 2005, it was official: the second best-supported club in England and the eleventh richest in the world had completed 50 years without winning a domestic trophy. Since their last success - an FA Cup win in 1955 - no less than thirty-two clubs have won one of the three major prizes in the English game, but not the Magpies. In that half century, they've employed some of the biggest names in world football, yet most of their fanatical supporters have never seen them win a pot. In 2004, Sir Bobby Robson paid the price for failing to bring the holy grail to the Geordie faithful. And in 2006, Graeme Souness was next to go, the 17th manager to try - and fail - to win one of English football's glittering prizes for the longest suffering fans in the land. In Newcastle United: Fifty Years of Hurt, Ged Clarke examines this extraordinary football phenomenon with all the humour you would expect from a disappointed but dedicated United fan. He chronicles the decades of disaster and talks to Newcastle legends such as Peter Beardsley, Les Ferdinand, Jack Charlton, Bob Moncur and Malcolm Macdonald in a bid to discover an explanation for the longest losing streak in top-class football.


Cityscapes and Perceptual Dialectology

Cityscapes and Perceptual Dialectology

Author: Jennifer Cramer

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Published: 2016-02-22

Total Pages: 322

ISBN-13: 1614510083

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This edited collection presents papers relating to the state of the art in Perceptual Dialectology research. The authors take an international view of the field of Perceptual Dialectology, broadly defined, to assess the similarities and contrasts in non-linguists’ perceptions of the dialect landscape. The volume is global in focus, and chapters discuss data gathered in the United States, the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, France, Germany, Austria, and South Korea. The common methods used by many of the contributors means that readers will be able to draw comparisons from the breadth of the volume. The primary focus of this volume is geared toward an examination of dialect perceptions in and of cities, with an additional goal of presenting empirical, theoretical, and methodological advancements in Perceptual Dialectology. Authors’ contributions to the collection examine how the urban setting influences perceptions of linguistic variation and, in the course of examining the connections between place and perceptions, explore several interrelated themes of linguistic variation, including the differences in the perception of rural and urban areas, processes of perception and language change, and the relationship between perception and ‘reality’.