ABSTRACT

First published in 2004. This five-volume major work is a comprehensive collection of primary sources which examine changing attitudes to sport in the late Victorian and Edwardian eras. At the beginning of the period few sports were regulated, but by the outbreak of the First World War organized sport had become an integral part of British cultural, social and economic life. Martin Polley has collected articles from a wide range of journals including Blackwood's Magazine, Nineteenth Century, Fortnightly Review and Contemporary Review, which reveal changing middle-class attitudes to sport. The five volumes cover the varieties of sport being promoted, sport and education, commercial and financial aspects of sport, sport and animals and the globalization of sport through empire. Volume 2 includes sport, education and improvement.

part 4|243 pages

Sport in Educational Institutions

chapter 45|5 pages

‘Cricket’ (extract)

chapter 46|9 pages

‘Well Rowed, Cambridge!’

chapter 47|14 pages

‘The Academical Oarsman’

chapter 49|11 pages

‘Are our Oarsmen Degenerate?’

chapter 50|8 pages

‘Physical education’

chapter 52|3 pages

‘The Preparatory School’ (extract)

chapter 53|9 pages

‘Eton Cricket’

chapter 55|8 pages

‘Public School Products’

chapter 58|8 pages

‘Physical Education in Schools’

chapter 60|14 pages

‘The Breed of Man’

chapter 63|7 pages

‘Youth in Cricket’

part 5|222 pages

Sport, Health, and Improvement

chapter 67|4 pages

‘London Playgrounds’

chapter 68|12 pages

‘Recreation’

chapter 70|4 pages

‘Decay of Bodily Strength in Towns’

chapter 71|6 pages

‘National Muscle’

chapter 74|19 pages

‘Modern Rifle Shooting’

chapter 75|9 pages

‘Are we an Athletic People?’

chapter 76|9 pages

‘Health on the Bicycle’

chapter 77|10 pages

‘Woman as an Athlete’

chapter 81|12 pages

‘Athletics and Health’

chapter 82|9 pages

‘Fighting and Fox-Hunting’

chapter 85|9 pages

‘The Physique of Girls’

chapter 86|17 pages

‘Sport and Decadence’