In a time of unprecedented political and economic
transformation, the middle classes of Victorian and Edwardian
England became principal players in a new social order. Nowhere did
their culture, values and identity gain clearer expression than in
their sports, and their influence is still felt in the way we
organise, play and think of sport today.
A Sport-Loving Society presents a selection of groundbreaking
essays from the journals which have defined sport history over the
past three decades. These essays explore the role of the social
institutions and issues of the Victorian and Edwardian periods in
shaping the sports of the English middle classes, including:
- education
- the emancipation of women
- religion
- culture and class
- diplomacy and war.
Showcasing the work of prominent sport historians, this book
demonstrates the value of sport as a vehicle for the study of wider
social change.
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