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Articles

Introduction: sport, recreation and British labour

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Pages 539-546 | Published online: 14 Nov 2014
 

Notes

 2. CitationRosenzweig, Eight Hours for What We Will, 2, 3, 222.

 3. CitationStedman Jones, “Class Expression versus Social Control?” 169, 70.

 4. CitationMcKibbin, Ideologies of Class, 15.

 5. CitationHobsbawm, Worlds of Labour, Chapters 10 and 11.

 6. CitationCampbell and McIlroy, “Britain”, 116.

 7. CitationMason, Association Football.

 8. CitationFishwick, English Football and Society and CitationMcKibbin, Ideologies of Class, Chapter 9.

 9. CitationWaters, British Socialists and CitationJones, Sport, Politics and the Working Class.

10. CitationJones, Sport, Politics and the Working Class, 198.

11. CitationWrigley, “Labour and Sport”.

12. See CitationSavage and Miles, Remaking of the British Working Class, 10–17 and CitationHuggins, “Second-Class Citizens”.

13. See, e.g. CitationAugust, British Working Class.

14. CitationFitzgerald, British Labour Management; CitationPhillips, “Fellowship in Recreation”; CitationMunting, “Games Ethic and Industrial Capitalism” and CitationCrewe, “What About the Workers”.

15. CitationShpayer-Makov, “Relinking Work and Leisure”, 239.

16. CitationHeller, London Clerical Workers, 48.

17. CitationCollins, Sport in Capitalist Society, 96.

18. CitationRobertson, Co-operative Movement, 74–82; CitationLeeworthy, “Diversion from the New Leisure” and CitationLeeworthy, “CitationDragons of the North”.

19. Examples include CitationVamplew, “Not Playing the Game” and CitationTaylor, “Boxers United”.

20. See CitationKorr, End of Baseball; CitationKraft, Stage to Studio and CitationKraft, Citation Vegas at Odds .

Additional information

Notes on contributors

David Dee

David Dee is Lecturer in Modern History at De Montfort University, Leicester. He has published widely on British-Jewish history, in particular the community's involvement with sport and leisure and the effect of this on Jewish ethnic identity. His first monograph, Sport and British Jewry: Integration, Ethnicity and anti-Semitism, 1880–1970 was published in hardback by Manchester University Press in 2013. A paperback version is to be published in November 2014. He is currently working on a new book which focuses on social change and identity formation amongst the Jewish community in the interwar years.

Matthew Taylor

Matthew Taylor is Professor of History in the International Centre for Sports History and Culture at De Montfort University, Leicester. His research has focused mainly on the social and cultural history of British and global sport, including most recently “The Global Ring? Boxing, Mobility and Transnational Networks in the Anglophone World, 1890–1914”, Journal of Global History, 8: 2, July 2013. He is the author of Moving With the Ball: The Migration of Professional Footballers (Berg, 2001), co-authored with Pierre Lanfranchi, and The Association Game: A History of British Football (Longman, 2008).

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