Sport and the Making of Britain

Sampul Depan
Manchester University Press, 15 Des 1993 - 358 halaman

The British love of sport is legendary. In this lively and stimulating book Derek Birley looks at the part it played in shaping British society.

The book traces the development of sporting conventions from medieval chivalry to modern notions of sportsmanship and fair play. Particular sports from hunting and the tournament to ball-games and athletics are shown against the social background of the emerging nation. The first laws of favourite pastimes such as horse-racing, cricket and boxing were devised by the privileged for gambling purposes, but were enthusiastically followed by the lower orders for pleasure and profit.

Amongst the topics explored are the changing fortunes and fashions in field sports, 'gentlemen and players' in cricket, the public school games cult, purity in amateur rowing, the urban middle-class discovery of lawn tennis and golf, and the 'north-south divide' in football. These social issues are cross-threads in the theme of sport's influence on national identity, patriotism and imperialism in the making of Britain.

Remarkable in its scope and in its linking of sport to the changing social political scene, this is a splendidly readable history.

 

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Tentang pengarang (1993)

Sir Derek Birley is the author of several books for Aurum, including The Willow Wand, A Social History of English Cricket and the trilogy Sport and the Making of Britain, which won the British Society of Sports History's Aberdare Literary Award in 1995. He retired as vice-chancellor of theUniversity of Ulster in 1991 after a distinguished career as an educational administrator. He died in 2002.

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