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Die‐Hard Fans and the Ivory Tower's Ties that Bind
Author(s) -
Clotfelter Charles T.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
social science quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.482
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 1540-6237
pISSN - 0038-4941
DOI - 10.1111/ssqu.12141
Subject(s) - attendance , politics , loyalty , white (mutation) , ivory tower , residence , clothing , protestantism , sociology , advertising , political science , media studies , gender studies , law , demography , business , biochemistry , chemistry , gene
Objective This study examines extremely loyal fans of prominent American college sports teams. It seeks to find out how common they are and what their characteristics are. Methods The study defines die‐hard fans as those whose published obituaries both note this loyalty and mention the team name for a specific university. A sample of such fans associated with 26 universities is compared to individuals picked at random from obituaries from the same states. Other comparisons employ data on political‐party registration. Results Such fans are uncommon, making up only about 2 percent of adults whose obituaries are published. They tend to have been predominantly male and, compared to otherwise similar adults, had higher rates of college attendance, were more likely to be white, more likely to affiliate with mainline Protestant denominations but also more likely to have no religious affiliation, volunteered more often as coaches, and had a registered affiliation to some political party. Conclusion As a group, they represent an important link between the “common man” and the bastions of intellectual activity that are America's research universities. As illustration, many more die‐hard fans were linked to their universities by way of state residence than by attendance. And many of them had blue‐collar occupations or never went to college.