This collection of essays charts the development of rugby football
from its origins in the English public schools and ancient
universities to its acceptance in the farthest reaches of the
empire. As the authors show, central to an understanding of the
place of rugby in all these settings is evidence demonstrating that
the game was a form of both hegemonic masculinity and homosocial
behaviour, as well as a means of promoting nationalism and social
control.
A major aim of the editors has been to highlight the changes and
continuities which the game of rugby and its traditions of
manliness and masculinity have undergone due to the effects of both
time and place. The book concludes with a discussion on the current
state and future of rugby, particularly of the impact of the World
Cup, professionalism and commercialism on this still 'gendered'
sport.
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