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Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Ball games > Golf
While most research on inequality focuses on impoverished
communities, it often ignores how powerful communities and elites
monopolize resources at the top of the social hierarchy. In
Privilege at Play, Hugo Ceron-Anaya offers an intersectional
analysis of Mexican elites to examine the ways affluent groups
perpetuate dynamics of domination and subordination. Using
ethnographic research conducted inside three exclusive golf clubs
and in-depth interviews with upper-middle and upper-class golfers,
as well as working-class employees, Ceron-Anaya focuses on the
class, racial, and gender dynamics that underpin privilege in
contemporary Mexico. His detailed analysis of social life and the
organization of physical space further considers how the legacy of
imperialism continues to determine practices of exclusion and how
social hierarchies are subtlety reproduced through distinctions
such as fashion and humor, in addition to the traditional
indicators of wealth and class. Adding another dimension to the
complex nature of social exclusion, Privilege at Play shows how
elite social relations and spaces allow for the resource hoarding
and monopolization that helps create and maintain poverty.
From PGA Class A professional golfer Barry Clayton comes a useful
and easy-to-understand golf instruction guide perfect for amateurs
and the seasoned professional. Brimming with invaluable tips and
advice, "Secrets from a Golf Pro: A to Z" is the ideal tool to help
you improve your game.
Drawing on his extensive experience golfing with the PGA and
teaching the game, Clayton offers a unique way to fix your golfing
faults. Based on a cause and effect system, this guide includes
easy-to-follow pictures that give key points for understanding the
demonstrated move or position. Working his way from the letter
A-"Aim the Clubface First"-to the letter Z-"Zero in on Your
Target"-Clayton instructs you on the finer points of a game whose
difficulties can stymie even legendary players.
Whether you need to perfect a swing or get your head into the
game, "Secrets from a Golf Pro" will enable you to make real
changes in your mechanics and your thought patterns. Elevate your
game with Clayton's expert advice, and watch your skills rival the
pros'
Offers immediate improvement to any duffer, provides clear cut
advice that readers can take to the course and see results by the
following week's game. Dozens of photographs to illustrate each
tip.
Throughout the period of legally supported segregation in the
United States, practices of racial discrimination, touching every
sector of American life, prevented African Americans from
participating formally in professional sports. "Jim Crow" policies
remained in place in baseball, football, and basketball until a few
years before the Supreme Court struck down the "separate but equal"
doctrine in 1954. By the late 1950s, the African American presence
was felt in major sports. But this was not the case in professional
golf, which continued to maintain segregation policies perpetuating
the stereotype that African Americans were suited only to caddie
roles in support of white players. The Professional Golfers
Association, unaffected by the 1954 Brown decision since it was a
private organization, maintained a "Caucasian only" membership
clause until 1961. All-white private clubs maintained racial
exclusion until the PGA Championship Shoal Creek Country Club
Affair in 1990. Using black newspapers, archives, interviews with
living professional golfers and other informants, and black club
records, Dawkins and Kinloch reconstruct the world of segregated
African American golf from the 1890s onward. In the process they
show the pivotal role of Joe Louis, who claimed his hardest fight
was the one against segregated golf. While others have documented
the rise of an African American presence in other sports, no
comparable efforts have traced their roles in golf. This is a
pioneering work that will be a resource for other writers and
researchers and all who are interested in Black life in American
society and sports.
Golfers everywhere, from professionals like Darren Clarke and
Padraig Harrington to the humblest amateur on the driving range,
are familiar with the sport's 'Rotella Rules', which reinforce the
attitude needed to maximize a player's performance. Now, beloved
'Doc' Rotella, author of GOLF IS NOT A GAME OF PERFECT and PUTTING
OUT OF YOUR MIND presents an anytime, anywhere quick reference tool
sure to become a vital addition to every golf bag. THE GOLFER'S
MIND gives players exactly what they want - a quick reference they
can carry with them easily to consult any time they need
reinforcement from Rotella's guiding principles. In the perfect
format for the busy golfer, THE GOLFER'S MIND is a concise and
convenient guide that will appeal to Rotella's millions of
followers and is sure to become a golf classic.
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"Anger is a part of being human ... how one deals with it defines
him, as you so aptly describe. The one constant is the ability to
let anger go once it's grabbed on to you. Some are better at it
than others. Thanks for your thoughts on this ... they were on
point."
-Tom Watson, eight-time major championship winner on reading
Hole No. 7
"It was delightful reading, and your depiction of the Pebble Beach
experience was classic (and very much appreciated, I might add
...). The comparison to St Andrews is a terrific debate. Thanks for
making it so appealing. Our sincere best wishes to you in bringing
this to many readers and golfers throughout the world."
-RJ Harper, Senior VP, Golf at Pebble Beach Company on reading
Hole No. 11
"This is the best side-by-side presentation and analysis I've
seen."
-George Peper, editor, LINKS Magazine on reading Hole No.
9
"Wayne really captured the Augusta National you see in person. It
was an enjoyable chapter to read and evoked strong memories of
playing the Masters. Well done."
-Gary Player, nine-time major championship winner on reading
Hole No. 1
"The Verma Cuppers certainly seemed to enjoy themselves and you did
well to 'run' on the West Sands, albeit in slow motion, after your
experiences the day before We are delighted you enjoyed the
experience at St Andrews and can certainly detect from your writing
your appreciation of the history surrounding the Home of Golf."
-John Grant, Director of Golf, St. Andrews Links Trust on
reading Hole No. 6
"Golf Shorts and Plus Fours: Musings from a Golfing
Traditionalist" from Wayne T. Morden is a sometimes comic look at
the game of golf in all its glory and idiosyncrasies. Arranged like
an eighteen-hole golf course-including trivia refreshments and
three additional playoff holes-this collection of short stories
offers life lessons and relies heavily on golf's fundamental tenets
to remind golfers why they are so obsessed with this pastime.
Morden conveys exasperation over the proverbial sand trap and
laughs over Star Wars lingo and Verma Cup antics. Golf has not only
taught him how to be a sportsman but it has also taught him how to
be a better man to his friends, family, and fellow golfers. "Golf
Shorts and Plus Fours" is a collection of well-informed, analytical
and entertaining bits of wisdom that will warm the heart of any
devoted golfer.
Danny O'Malley, a fairly decent amateur golfer, is tricked into
selling his soul to the devil in exchange for a promise of winning
the richest prize ever offered in a professional tournament: Five
million dollars A history of the game and many of its greatest
players is interspersed throughout the story. Why do people from
every culture attempt to master this cruel game when there is so
little chance of success? For example, can you name a great Italian
golfer? Trust me, my friends. There are no great Italian golfers.
In the spring, when the first bold blossoms of bougainvillea splash
down the hillsides of Sicily in a glorious crimson tide and
gondoliers ply their trade along the romantic canals of Venice, a
young man is more intrigued by the upward slash of a signorina's
skirt than the downward slope of a green, and more beguiled by the
lie that rests on her lips than the lie of a dimpled white ball in
the fairway.The English, self-deprecating and stoical, are as
emotionally suited for golf as they are for espionage. They know
the fairways and greens are as duplicitous as any double agent and
will ultimately betray them. It is not a question of if, but a
matter of when. For years, Nick Faldo was the personification of a
golfing machine, an assassin of par whose deadly game struck fear
in the hearts of opponents. His sponsors tried to humanize him to
enhance the sale of their products. On rare occasions, an
involuntary twitch in the shadowy recesses of his stiff upper lip
created the fleeting illusion of a smile. But their feeble attempt
to cast the dour Brit as Prince Charming fooled no one and was as
futile an exercise as painting a happy face on the Sphinx in order
to alter its enigmatic essence. Still, in fairness to "Sir"
Nick-recently knighted by Queen Elizabeth-it should be noted that
as tournament prize money has escalated to astronomical levels, the
Americans and Europeans have also developed a decent impersonation
of Faldo's English sc
When learning Thomsen was writing Golf: Find Center, Enter the
Circle, many had emphasized the diversity of golf due to its
natural setting, and golf's natural setting was open to amateurs,
professionals, and all ages also. Thomsen was quick to agree. "Golf
can serve the needs of many. It's my job to open up to more and
increase the standards within the art form-golf." Thomsen said.
Some have asked, "Who do you think will read it, Jack?" "Few," came
the reply. "Golfers mainly, and only the most obsessive of those.
There's no popular market for this book. Materialism is too much in
demand, and serving the spirit has become lost in the equation."
That brief exchange reveals an unvarnished truth: golf is
essentially caught in a materialistic grasp as an overview of the
game, and yet as an art form, independent players function in it.
The artist Vincent van Gogh had sold few of his paintings. Someone
else had done that. Is the treasure the money or the art? Golf:
Find Center, Enter the Circle's genesis from a personal journal's
beginning had been imbued with a Joycean stream of consciousness
that, in its intuitiveness, is likely to engage none but the
determined reader. By way of contrast, however, the book's title
forthrightly distills Thomsen's thesis. Golf, he asserts, can be a
spiritual practice when done as an expression of the golfer's
essential self and if engaged in it for the sheer love of golf's
diversity, its wholeness, bringing on its transcendental nature.
Accept Thomsen's invitation. Turn your attention inward, tap into
the answers that are there, feel the resultant centering, the
balance, and project that centering-enter the circle. "A liberated
person possesses perfect senses and with perfect senses only can
serve the sense proprietor," says the Bhagavad Gita.
Golf Fore Ever provides very helpful information for the novice or
newcomer to the sport of golf. The information provided in Golf
Fore Ever will make golf an even more enjoyable and rewarding
experience for you and help you avoid the pitfalls most players
encounter when they are first learning to play. Golf Fore Ever is a
guide for beginning golfers taken from the experiences of Mike
Deagle who has over thirty years of experimenting and playing golf.
This guide will provide you with the right information to help you
start to play golf the "right way." On your journey to a better
golf game, you will discover the delights and frustrations
associated with the game of golf. Golf can be a roller coaster ride
of emotions, from euphoria when you hit a career shot to a tight
pin placement, to complete dismay when your ball finds the water or
goes out of bounds on the very next hole. It is up to you, the
player, to determine whether you enjoy the ride by not letting the
game get the better of you. This guide will truly help you on your
challenging journey to the wonderful world of golf.
* MINI GOLF FUN ANYTIME, ANYWHERE: Includes portable putting green
with wind-up windmill obstacle, 2 putters, and 2 balls * UNIQUE 2"
x 3" WIND-UP WINDMILL: Features a kitchy windmill design with
wind-up mechanism (no batteries required) * BOOK INCLUDED: 32-page,
2-1/2" x 3" illustrated mini book on the history and rules of this
popular pastime * UNIQUE GIFT: Perfect for both golf and mini golf
fans of all ages
The first known rules of golf were drawn up in 1744 in Edinburgh
for the world's first open golf competition at Leith by the
Gentlemen Golfers of Edinburgh, who became The Honourable Company
of Edinburgh Golfers. In the nineteenth century, the rules evolved
as local clubs took the Edinburgh rules and adapted them for their
own use. In 1897 the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews
assumed oversight of the rules and in the same year published the
first national set of rules. This book examines the history of the
rules of golf from their first codification to the present day. It
looks at the circumstances of the composition of the first rules,
their scope, and afterlife.
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