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Of Gods and Games - Religious Faith and Modern Sports (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R534
Discovery Miles 5 340
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Of Gods and Games - Religious Faith and Modern Sports (Hardcover)
Series: George H. Shriver Lecture Series in Religion in American History Series
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Loot Price R534
Discovery Miles 5 340
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That Americans take to sports with a spiritual fervor is no secret.
Athletics has even been called a civil religion for how it
permeates our daily lives as we chase our own dreams of glory or
watch others compete. Few would deny our national devotion to
sports; however, many would gloss over it as all of a piece. To do
that, as William J. Baker shows us, is to miss the fascinating
variety of experiences at the intersection of sports and
religion-and the rami cations of such on a national citizenry
defined, as Baker writes, "by the team they cheer on Saturday and
the church they attend on Sunday." With nods to modern and ancient
history, Baker looks at the ever changing relationship between
faith and sports through vignettes about devout athletes, coaches,
and journalists. Of Gods and Games offers an accessible entree into
some of the larger issues embedded in American culture's
sports-religion connection. Baker first considers two Christian
athletes who have engaged sports and religion on fundamentally
different terms: Shelly Pennefather, one of the dominant women's
basket- ball players of the late 1980s, who left the sport for life
as a cloistered nun; and Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow, who has
used his college and pro football careers as a platform for
evangelising. In discussing basketball coach Dean Smith (University
of North Carolina) and football coaches Steve Spurrier (University
of South Carolina) and Bill McCartney (University of Colorado)
Baker looks at how each strove to honor faith amid sometimes
complicated personal lives and ever-crushing professional demands.
Finally, Baker looks at how faith inspired such sportswriters as
Grantland Rice, who sprinkled his stories with religious allusions,
and Watson Spoelstra, who struck a deal with God at his daughter's
deathbed (she recovered) and subsequently devoted his off-hours and
retirement years to charity work.
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