ABSTRACT

This book argues that sport in the era of global or financialised capitalism has undergone a process of fracturing, which requires a re-assessment of longstanding and consensual accounts of traditional-to-modern sporting activity. Considering rival concepts of sport, it presents detailed, illustrative studies of various types of sporting or athletic activity – including soccer, cricket, rugby and track and field – to advance an alternative sociological understanding of sport rooted in the philosophies and theories of critical realism and critical theory. As such, A Critical Realist Theory of Sport will appeal to scholars of sociology and social theory with interests in sport, research methods and critical realist thought.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

A Critical Realist Theory of Sport

chapter 1|26 pages

The Case for a Revised Sociology of Sport

chapter 2|24 pages

A Critical Realist Frame

chapter 4|15 pages

Global System Versus Local Lifeworld

chapter 5|22 pages

A Case Study

Rugby as 'Tribal Warfare'