|
Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Winter sports
Once a winter pastime for socializing and courtship, skating
evolved into the wildly popular competitive sport of figure
skating, one of the few athletic arenas where female athletes hold
a public profile--and earning power--equal to that of men. Renowned
sports historian James R. Hines chronicles figure skating's rise
from its earliest days through its head-turning debut at the 1908
Olympics and its breakthrough as entertainment in the 1930s. Hines
credits figure skating's explosive expansion to an ever-increasing
number of women who had become proficient skaters and wanted to
compete, not just in singles but with partners as well. Matters
reached a turning point when British skater Madge Syers entered the
otherwise-male 1902 World Championship held in London and finished
second. Called skating's first feminist, Syers led a wave of women
who made significant contributions to figure skating and helped
turn it into today's star-making showcase at every Winter Olympics.
Packed with stories and hard-to-find details, Figure Skating in the
Formative Years tells the early history of a sport loved and
followed by fans around the world.
|
You may like...
Guilty
Martina Cole, Jacqui Rose
Paperback
R425
R379
Discovery Miles 3 790
The Coven
Lizzie Fry
Paperback
R442
R406
Discovery Miles 4 060
|