Individualism and Nationalism: Negotiating Identity through Sports in Tony Adams Addicted
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Faculty of Letters and Foreign Languages Department of English
Abstract
Sports narratives are seen as tales of national symbolism where individuals manifest their
nationalism and display their national identity. Collective sports narratives, in particular, value the collective
aspect of individuals working as a team to represent their nation at the expense of their individualism and
selfhood in private. In the era of postmodernism, sports narratives are seen as tales of the erasure of the self and
individualism, where athletes lose themselves to serve their team and their nation. This dissertation provides a
psychoanalytical analysis of Addicted by Tony Addams, an autobiography that follows novelistic conventions as a
sports narrative. It professes that the focus on nationalism and national identity in the novel creates the conditions
for self-discovery, fostering both personal identity and individual autonomy. Addicted by Tony Adams offers a
new perspective as a sports narrative whereby nationalism and national identity does not diminish individualism
and the search for personal identity but rather foster it. In this context, nationalism functions analogously to
Lacan’s mirror stage: it reflects individualism and encourages the search for personal identity, particularly within
sports narratives. This dissertation aims to demonstrate, while approaching Addicted through Lacanian
psychoanalysis and the theoretical framework of postmodern literature, that despite its overwhelming support of
nationalism and national identity, sports narratives advocate for individualism and the search for the self on a
personal level. It situates Tony Adams’ Addicted within the context of postmodern literary analysis, highlighting
its use of narrative fragmentation, self-reflection, and the tension between nationalism and individual identity. It focuses on a psychoanalytic reading of Tony Adams’ autobiographical narrative.
